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Bad Sensor
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11-15-2012, 02:37 PM
Post: #11
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RE: Bad Sensor
I just found a reseller selling probes in clear baggies, no markings, no literature, no instructions, nothing. I think that is a disservice! Maybe they are buying in bulk and repackaging.
When I used the white insertion tool, I tend to push the sensor out of the tube, then when I tried to push the tube in I broke the sensor. My first time out I broke two of the five probes.
JD Grafton Concrete Answers for Flooring Problems JGrafton@ccsolves.com |
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11-15-2012, 04:09 PM
(This post was last modified: 11-15-2012 04:10 PM by Ernesto.)
Post: #12
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RE: Bad Sensor
(11-15-2012 02:37 PM)CC Solutions Wrote: I just found a reseller selling probes in clear baggies, no markings, no literature, no instructions, nothing. I think that is a disservice! Maybe they are buying in bulk and repackaging. You actually bought Wagner Rapid Rh sensors off the street? Like black market sensors? For shame.... ![]() But I hear what your saying, I never had one of the old blue ones not work. Stephen Perrera dba Top Floor Installation Co. http://www.tucsonazflooring.com http://www.floorsavior.com |
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11-15-2012, 06:02 PM
Post: #13
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RE: Bad Sensor
I still have an old blue one and the drill bit for it!! Weren't they nice? Anyone could push the button and take a reading!
But the new orange ones were going to be cheaper because you didn't throw away the reader every time.... Let's see, the old blue ones were about $25 each and the last orange ones I bought were...
JD Grafton Concrete Answers for Flooring Problems JGrafton@ccsolves.com |
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11-15-2012, 07:51 PM
Post: #14
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RE: Bad Sensor
(11-15-2012 06:02 PM)CC Solutions Wrote: I still have an old blue one and the drill bit for it!! Weren't they nice? Anyone could push the button and take a reading! What the hell are you drinking? Throw away the reader every time? Stephen Perrera dba Top Floor Installation Co. http://www.tucsonazflooring.com http://www.floorsavior.com |
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11-15-2012, 09:49 PM
Post: #15
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RE: Bad Sensor
The old blue probes with the pointed ends had the reader built in so yes, every time you covered them up you were throwing away the reader.
JD Grafton Concrete Answers for Flooring Problems JGrafton@ccsolves.com |
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11-16-2012, 06:51 AM
Post: #16
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RE: Bad Sensor
Oh, thats old.
Stephen Perrera dba Top Floor Installation Co. http://www.tucsonazflooring.com http://www.floorsavior.com |
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11-21-2012, 05:35 PM
Post: #17
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RE: Bad Sensor
Okay, I'm a little alarmed by stories of people busting sensors- Jason, can you help?
To their great credit, your supplier in Oz sent me a new insertion tool in a jiff, no charge. When I put it in the sensor, the lowest stepped section presses hard, right onto the reader plate inside the sensor. Won't this damage it? I don't want to question the manufacturer's wisdom but I want to make sure I'm doing this right. Pat Atherton Floor Test Australia www.moisturetesting.com.au "Democracy ... can only exist until the majority discover they can vote themselves largess out of the public treasury" - Tytler, De Tocqueville, Reagan |
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11-21-2012, 08:14 PM
Post: #18
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RE: Bad Sensor
Well you may paint me as a bull in a china shop, but the white insert tool fits waaay down in the probe, and these new orange readers aren't quite as burly as the older models. When I pushed in the probe the sleeve got hung up a bit and the base went in. Me being in a hurry pushed harder not figuring out the sleeve being disconnected. When the sleeve didn't go down (and why would it, I was smacking on the base
) I did what any redneck country boy would do. I got a bigger hammer! That fixed the problem for sure. I had parts all over the place....
JD Grafton Concrete Answers for Flooring Problems JGrafton@ccsolves.com |
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11-22-2012, 06:50 AM
(This post was last modified: 11-22-2012 06:51 AM by CCR.)
Post: #19
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RE: Bad Sensor
I can share from tips on inserting the new sensors if anyone likes, cause they are a bit more delicate. Now that I'm used to them, I like them better. I used to get about 1 in 10 that would read "Er" after placing. And I would have to drill another hole and waste a sensor (at my cost). Only happened once out of the last 100 or so I've place with the new ones.
JK Nixon Concrete Restoration Services, LLC Pittsburgh, PA http://www.rhtester.com |
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11-22-2012, 09:31 AM
(This post was last modified: 11-22-2012 09:33 AM by Ernesto.)
Post: #20
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RE: Bad Sensor
(11-21-2012 08:14 PM)CC Solutions Wrote: Well you may paint me as a bull in a china shop, but the white insert tool fits waaay down in the probe, and these new orange readers aren't quite as burly as the older models. When I pushed in the probe the sleeve got hung up a bit and the base went in. Me being in a hurry pushed harder not figuring out the sleeve being disconnected. When the sleeve didn't go down (and why would it, I was smacking on the base My sleeve came off as well. But that should not effect the sensor. Like what if your doing a thin elevated slab that dries from both sides? gobble gobble
Stephen Perrera dba Top Floor Installation Co. http://www.tucsonazflooring.com http://www.floorsavior.com |
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