Maintenance, calibration and troubleshooting, 1 maintenance, 2 calibration – Fluke Biomedical 6000-529 User Manual

Page 13: 3 troubleshooting

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Maintenance, Calibration and Troubleshooting

Maintenance

3

3-1

Section 3

Maintenance, Calibration and Troubleshooting

3.1 Maintenance

The Model 6000-529 Ion Chamber requires no routine maintenance, other than routine inspection of the
chamber for damage.

3.2 Calibration

The Model 6000-529 Ion Chamber is accompanied by the chamber's sensitivity on the calibration report.
If this report is not available, the ion chamber may be returned to Fluke Biomedical so that a new
sensitivity factor may be obtained, or by the customer by intercomparison with a know ion chamber.


Obtain the value of chamber sensitivity in
dimensions of exposure per unit charge or air
Kerma per unit charge (see the calibration report
which accompanied the chamber), and the charge
calibration factor for the host instrument in
dimensions of charge per displayed exposure unit,
prior to referring to the applicable preamplifier
manual.

3.3 Troubleshooting

Extreme care must be used when troubleshooting a
system that has power applied. All standard
troubleshooting precautions apply.



Once a problem has been located, remove all
power before continuing with the repair.



Personnel performing the troubleshooting must be
familiar with the operation of the system and the
location of each piece of equipment used.


Troubleshooting consists of checking the wiring and verifying inputs/outputs are present on all
connectors. If a problem develops with the Ion Chamber, return the chamber to Fluke Biomedical.

NOTE

WARNING

WARNING

CAUTION

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