Is Oxygen Not Included On Console

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Joy Wida

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Aug 3, 2024, 5:46:57 PM8/3/24
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The oxygen wall/console Quick Connect latch-valve assembly shall include an o-ring seal primary valve, be gas specific for the labeled service and accept only corresponding hose and apparatus with diss nut and nipple adapters. the latch-valve assembly shall be indexed to the corresponding rough in assembly to avoid accidental cross-connection and shall telescope up to 3/4 in to allow for variation in finished wall thickness from 1/2 in up to 1-1/4 in. A metal cover plate insert with permanent, color-coded marking of service identifcation shall be included as part of the latch-valve assembly, White, Green.

These consoles contain several electronic data displays from the firing room at the NASA Kennedy Space Center. They were used to manage the launch the Space Shuttle. In that room, several rows of similar consoles were staffed to monitor critical parameters before a launch. This station monitored parameters of the Shuttle's liquid oxygen tank. Controllers seated at these stations communicated with a headset and telephone connection.

PHANTOM 3,000 psig Oxygen Consoles are available in two configurations to support a wide range of mission profiles. The Ultra-High Capacity Console is capable of supporting up to 25 Users while the High Capacity Console supports up to 10 Users.
Key features of the oxygen consoles include:

A modular instrument console boot supplied by Shearwater that incorporates a standard Shearwater Peregrine dive computer, analog SPG, and optional analog compass in one HP hose mounted component. The configuration options allow the diver to customize an instrument console to their personal preferences. An included charging pad retaining clip allows the computer battery to be recharged while remaining mounted in the console. It's also possible to easily switch the Peregrine computer between console mount and wrist mount as needed.

The DGX Gears Premium SPG included with the console is 2 in diameter with 1.75 in face and features a chrome-plated all brass housing with a tempered mineral glass face and beryllium copper coiled Bourdon tube mechanism incorporating rack and pinion movement (aka 'pinned') providing the greatest degree of accuracy and reliability. The luminescent dial glows-in-the-dark, making it easier to read in low light situations. The hose swivel air spool is always included with our SPG. The DGX Gears Premium SPG is available in choice of imperial (PSI) or metric (BAR) scale with either a white or black face. We also offer a unique dual scale SPG in both PSI and BAR. (The Peregrine dive computer itself is user configurable for depth display in either feet or meters.)

The DGX Gears High Pressure Hose is optional and you may choose the material and length. The hose on consoles is typically 76 cm long. A few divers with a large chest, or who like to hold their instruments a little further out from their body when reading, may prefer a longer hose. An optional High Pressure Quick Disconnect Adapter is also available to allow convenient transport and storage of the console separate from rest of the regulator octopus assembly.

The optional compass boot includes our DGX Gears Tech Compass module with a smooth movement that is provided by the specially designed compass needle card and powerful magnets. The compass features a tilt potential of +/- 10 with an easy-to-read luminescent gauge face, a 360 ratcheted rotating bezel, and a side reading window. Available in versions balanced for either the Northern Hemisphere or the Southern Hemisphere.

Mounting an Instrument console on the end of the high-pressure hose is popular with sport divers because it puts all the information in one place along with freeing their forearms of additional equipment. Consoles are also frequently seen in classic octopus regulator configurations used for rental and training, making the job of the store equipment manager or instructor a little easier. Divers must always take care not to allow their console to "dangle" loose, creating an entanglement hazard plus not being environmentally friendly.

Instrument consoles are rarely seen in modern streamlined configurations used by experienced sport divers and never seen in technical diving configurations. Experienced divers are more concerned about depth, time and deco because often those are the limiting factors controlling their dive. They prefer to wrist mount their dive computer allowing easy access that promotes more frequent viewing of depth, time and decompression status. The diver typically stores their naked SPG out of the way on a shorter HP hose clipped to their waist D-ring in order to avoid dangling yet making the SPG easy to recover and read. Further, the compass usage techniques required for precise underwater navigation are easier with a wrist mount compass.

This oxygen panel/wall console adds extra realism to any hospital room or doctor's office. The console gives wearable oxygen masks and provides ventilation to an avatar wearing the Mercy patient (v5), respirator, or diving HUDs.

Also included is a separate emergency call light to place outside the door of the room, to alert staff when help is needed. The owner can set which room number a particular console and call light are keyed to, so you know which room to respond to. The alarm can be triggered from the panel, and will also automatically sound if the patient is in distress.

So if you want to set the lights for each of your individual rooms as advertised you're out of luck. The other features work beautifully as with other products I have bought from this seller. Hopefully an update is in the works.

Generally, the life cycle of a game console goes something like this: After a splashy launch, the system will spend roughly five years in the spotlight, followed by another three to five years living in the shadow of the next generation. But for the Xbox 360, PlayStation 3 and Wii, the spotlight will keep shining for the next several years.

For those two companies, the big steps are something of a catch-up move with Nintendo. The Wii (and its motion-sensor controller) has stolen audience share from both companies. And both are hoping to win some of that back with Kinect (aka Project Natal) and the PlayStation Move controller.

Over the coming months, the industry will roll out new products tied to games that range from monitor the flow of oxygen in your blood to letting you control onscreen action purely with the power of your mind.

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