pasadena_commut
Well-Known Member
I had one of those on order (my wife's car has a gasoline odor coming from somewhere and we couldn't find it "by nose") which arrived yesterday. After letting it warm up and setting the sensitivity in clean air it did not go off when placed near either a sink or a shower drain for 30 seconds (with working traps and no odor). When the cap was pulled off the clean out in the front yard and the sensor placed just above it, it went off immediately, and there was a sewage odor there. When poked a couple of inches through a hole in a manhole cover over the city's sewer line in the street in a couple of seconds it lit one LED but also stopped ticking. That might be the "sudden change in humidity" effect the manual talks about rather than a true detection. A sewer smell above the manhole cover, if present, was not detectable over the strong "hot asphalt" and "nearby mystery oil spill" smells. (The neighbors must have thought I had lost my mind, kneeling in the street to sniff a manhole cover.)Thanks! I think I will get one such detector.
In conclusion, the device did actually detect sewer gas in the places where I could smell it, and did not detect it where I could not.
Other notes:
It is way too easy to bump the sensitivity dial. Nudge it one way and it screams (in clean air), the other way would give a false negative. The dial should have been recessed or had a cover to avoid that.
The manual says that if the batteries are put in backwards the device will get very hot and be destroyed. Wow. Profit margins so tight that they couldn't add any protective circuitry?