Daniel,

Your home auditor should become more familiar with her own test equipment!!!

Hydrogen is well known to cause false positives for CO when using a combustion 
analyzer. There are sensors which exhibit _low_ cross sensitivity to hydrogen, 
but those are not the rule. I know of no CO sensor that is completely immune to 
H2.

This is not to discount other combustion venting issues, backdrafting, running 
a car in an attached garage (even with the garage door open), etc. as a cause 
for her "ill feeling" symptoms.

Please remember when you install the battery box power vent, an appropriate 
inlet vent, drawing preferably outside air (sealed vent system) is also 
required or you may further (slightly) exacerbate the CO issue by pulling your 
intake air out of (e.g.) the natural draft tank water heater vent. 
FieldControls.com has an outstanding website that educates, informs, as well as 
sells venting products and solutions.

Best wishes,

Bill Loesch
Solar 1 - Saint Louis Solar
314 631 1094


  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Daniel Young 
  To: re-wrenches@lists.re-wrenches.org 
  Sent: Tuesday, June 29, 2010 8:50 AM
  Subject: [RE-wrenches] Battery Bank Off-gassing CO?


  I was emailed recently by someone in my area saying that she thinks here 
battery bank is going bad and poisoning her home.. My firm did not install her 
off grid system. Her original installer will not respond.

   

  She has an 6yr old battery bank w/ 6 Trojan L16H's (48V). The system has 
1.2kw of shell solar modules with an MX60 CC and FX Inverter. She noticed 
feeling ill when in the basement where the system electronics were installed, 
so she got out a combustion gas analyzer, (she is a home energy auditor), and 
recorded over 500 ppm CO in the battery bank storage closet, not the battery 
box, but the closet that stores the outback system. That is over double the 
concentration that the US Consumer Product Safety Commission considers deathly 
toxic. She reports this has been going on for the last 1-2 months. There is one 
battery box in this closet, with a 3" PVC vent pipe going up to the roof. There 
is no power vent.

   

  Has anyone heard of a flooded lead acid battery bank emitting CO? I did not 
think that a lead/sulfur based battery was capable of this. Is it possible that 
her combustion gas analyzer is mis-interpreting some other gas as CO?

   

  We already plan to install a power vent at minimum, and to closely inspect 
her ventilation system and improve it as needed. Just curious if anyone else 
has seen this happen before.

   

  Thanks,

   



   



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