




soaringhiggy wrote:Hammer;
The concentrations for the alarms are the OSHA limits for CO from 1989.
"1989 OSHA PEL: 35 ppm (40 mg/m3) TWA, 200 ppm (229 mg/m3) CEILING"
The 35 ppm Time Weighted Average (TWA) is a limit that a worker would be safe in for an 8 hour working day below the 35 ppm level. If the TWA is exceeded there are limitations on time and the limitations change depending on how much above the TWA the peak was and how long.
Ceiling is the concentration that you should remove your self from the environment A short-term exposure limit is one that addresses the average exposure over a 15-30 minute period of maximum exposure during a single work shift. A ceiling limit is one that may not be exceeded for any time, and is applied to irritants and other materials that have immediate effects.
If you so not get to the alarm you are under the concentration that the TWA was determined for the gas. One question is how long has it been since that detector has been calibrated or bump tested? The accuracy may be off if it has been some time.

Dog is my Copilot wrote:I inspected the airframe today and found this vented inspection cover shown in the picture below with the opposite orientation - having the intake vents pointed forward. I turned the inspection cover back into the correct orientation....
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