Brett248Vista wrote:
I'm not a thermodynamacist so I can't comment on why 72 Degrees F is your magic number. But perhaps it's just the amount of time it takes to get to 72F and the airflow the system is turning over in the amount of time it takes to get to 72 is raising the particulate level enough to trip the Kiddie's. The other issue is that you are using "Residential" Kiddie units, and those are not Time Average Weighted for a boat cabin, your boat cabin's SQ FT is much smaller than even the smallest room in your home and because of this, the averaging of those units is incorrect for in a boat cabin. But... And there's always a but... I would expect the Kiddie's would be LESS sensitive not more sensitive, since they are designed for much larger areas than your boat cabin.
At the very least I would sent the Xintex units in and have them recal'd and I would ditch the Kiddie Residential units and get the correct marine units.
The use of another sensor (singular) is additive, not replacement. The built-in Xintex sensors do trip, but usually only when there's a typical source of CO, like the dinghy running outside an open porthole. They're not what I'm concern about. They're probably due for recalibration, but that's not the current issue.
The smaller space argument is worth considering. Bear in mind, however, that the sensor doesn't trip when just the circulating fan is running. It only seems to trip if the cooling system is active too. That is, when both the fan and the cooling system are running for six hours the sensor tripped (and the handheld read the same PPM). Shutting off just the cooling system but leaving the fan running saw the numbers drop pretty quickly. This was also accompanied by a rise in temp from 72 to about 78F. That leads me to believe it has something to do with either the operation of the compressor or the resulting drop in temperature, not the dispersion of airborne particulates. I don't believe the air handler changes the path of air flow based on the compressor being operational. So it seems the running compressor is generating a source of particulates that trip a sensor.
I'm going to try running the system today to see if the numbers remain high or go higher after 6 hours. And then take the handheld sensor into the cabinet with the compressor to see if I can pinpoint a source of higher concentrations.
I have a third CO sensor that's never been used and stowed here at home in a ziploc bag. I may swap it with one of those on the boat to see if it activates. I've planned to have the existing ones recalibrated so now's probably as good a time as any to send them off.