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Gas Clip Technologies, Inc.

Address
305 W. FM 1382, Suite 540

Cedar Hill, Texas 75104
Toll Free
877.525.0808
Phone
+1.972.775.7577
Fax
+1.972.775.2483
Website
Official Website
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Technology
Technology

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Gas Clip Technologies is a Texas-based international company founded on returning safety, simplicity, reliability, and customer satisfaction to the gas detection business. Our focus from the beginning has been on one thing…designing and manufacturing simple to use portable gas detectors that save precious time, resources and lives.

Over the years, Gas Clip Technologies has pioneered and perfected the development of advanced infrared LEL sensor technology for portable gas detection. This low-power LED photometric infrared technology for LEL detection of hydrocarbon gases has not only reduced detector maintenance, downtime and expenses, but it has also made daily charging of portable multi-gas detectors a thing of the past. We offer this technology in each of our multi-gas detectors which enables them to run continuously for days, months or even years at a time. This technology also enables these detectors to operate in oxygen-deficient environments and to not suffer from LEL sensor poisoning. We also offer reliable single gas detectors for hydrogen sulfide (H2S), carbon monoxide (CO) or oxygen (O2) as well as quick and efficient docking stations for all our detectors.

Gas Clip Technologies offers solutions to typical safety issues with compliance-based detectors that are customizable, durable, and user-friendly. 100% of our detectors are quality tested to ensure customer satisfaction and low cost of ownership. All products are assembled in the USA and sold through local distributorships around the world. Our experienced Gas Clip Technologies team is here to help you solve your most difficult gas detection challenges.

Additional Info

Safety+Health Magazine

 

Trends in ... instruments and monitors

‘These are life safety devices’

April 28, 2019

Tracy Haas Depa

GAS CLIP TECHNOLOGIES HONEYWELL INDUSTRIAL SAFETY INDUSTRIAL SCIENTIFIC CORP. INSTRUMENTS AND MONITORS

From gas detectors and volatile organic compound monitors to flame detectors and noise dosimeters, on-the-job instruments and monitors are designed to provide an extra layer of protection against unseen hazards. Here, industry insiders describe advancements in the field, explain what can go wrong with this equipment and offer advice.

 

New technologies

LED-driven infrared LEL sensors are relatively new to the portable gas detection industry, according to Jeremy Majors, technical representative for Cedar Hill, TX-based Gas Clip Technologies. “This sensing technology is immune to common poisoning agents that adversely affect catalytic LEL sensors, which helps lower the overall maintenance and cost of ownership for the end user,” Majors said. “This technology also provides extended run times due to low power consumption, which ensures monitors will last through extended work shifts, such as during plant turnarounds, emergency services, power outages, etc.”

Portable gas-detecting instruments are incorporating components with multiple functions, enabling them to be smaller and lighter with longer run times, said Bob Fawley, product marketing manager – portables for Smithfield, RI-based Honeywell Industrial Safety. “Gas sensors are a good example: Sizes are shrinking, they are incorporating functions that used to require additional components (e.g., digital interface) and benefits such as oxygen sensors that don’t require lead is now possible,” Fawley said.

He added that the availability of wireless communication in these instruments is growing, and “this functionality is being coupled with cloud-based applications to continuously monitor the safety of employees.”

 

Concerns

Workers sometimes clean equipment improperly, Fawley noted. “There are many stories of workers placing their gas detector in vehicle exhaust or spritzing the sensor inlet with something from a spray can just to see what would happen,” he said, adding that sometimes workers clean equipment with an alcohol-based cleaner, which can be harmful to the sensor. “In each of these examples, the worker potentially jeopardized the operation of the detector, and therefore their own safety.”

To combat this issue, he recommends properly educating workers on how to maintain the equipment.

Majors points out that sensor ports can get clogged with mud or other debris, which can hinder or prevent gas detection altogether. However, workers should resist the urge to start digging away. “Sharp objects (pocket knives, pencils, paper clips) are not a good way to remove debris from the sensor ports, as they can puncture the paper filters covering them,” he cautioned.

 

Good to know

“The highest priority of the gas detector is to protect the worker from gas hazards and to do so as quickly and accurately as possible,” said Dave Wagner, director of applications engineering and product knowledge for Pittsburgh-based Industrial Scientific Corp. “To that end, it must always be maintained and calibrated properly each month. Even more importantly, gas detectors must be bump tested prior to each use.”

Ultimately, workers need to remember that these instruments and monitors help keep them safe. “These are life safety devices and, as such, should receive the appropriate care,” Fawley said. “Manufacturer requirements and guidelines for maintenance should be followed without exception.”

Compiled with the assistance of the International Safety Equipment Association

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