Geiger Counter Calibrations and Repair

Geiger counters are required to be calibrated
once every year. You can determine when your gieger counter was last calibrated by
checking the calibration sticker attached to it. If it has not been calibrated within the
last year, you should bring the geiger counter up to Environmental Health and Safety for
calibration. It will be sent out to a vendor for calibration, which takes up to 4 weeks.
Radiation Safety may be able lend you a geiger counter, if you absolutely need one.
However, we only have 6 spares that we can give out.
If your geiger counter is damaged or inoperable
and needs repair Radiation Safety can send it out to our vendor. We may be able to lend
you a spare geiger counter during the time it is out. However, we cannot guarantee
availability of a spare..
If your batteries die you should not bring the
geiger counter up to Radiation Safety. Determine if the batteries are regular batteries
that you can obtain at a department or hardware store. It will cost you less money if you
replace them on your own rather than if we have to ship the gieger counter out. Otherwise,
if the geiger counter requires a special battery bring it up to Radiation Safety and we
will send it out for you.
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Ludlum Model 3 with Pancake
Probe |
RPI's MiniMonitor |
When conducting surveys with a Geiger counter:
- Ensure that the instrument has been calibrated within the
last 12 months,
- Ensure that the batteries are working properly,
- Check the survey instrument with a known source of material
to insure that it is responding to radiation,
- Monitor the area very slowly at about one-half inch above the
surface being monitored to avoid contaminating the detector,
- Document the results of the survey, the instrument make,
model number, serial number, calibration date, and readings must be recorded on the
written survey report.
Radiation Safety
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