Vanguard WirelessHART gas detector
United Electric Controls announces the availability of beta versions of its Vanguard WirelessHART gas detector. The new detector, which has a five-year battery life, is designed to maximize toxic or explosive gas detection points yet eliminate the need for fixed wiring, according to the company. United Electric Controls is offering free beta trials to gain additional feedback on customer experience and product performance prior to the official product rollout in early 2017.
“Our new Vanguard gas detector has received approvals from all relevant safety agencies, and we now want to utilize the time we have, before officially releasing the product next year, to learn as much as we can about how it performs in the field,” says Wil Chin, vice president of marketing and business development, United Electric Controls.
United Electric developed the Vanguard detector to provide a cost effective way to add multiple gas measurement points, according to the company. The cost of adding one new gas measurement point, including the cost and labor of obtaining ‘hot’ work permits, running conduits for wires and burying them, can reportedly exceed $10,000 per device for land-based systems and as much as five times more for offshore applications. Wireless technology can reduce that cost up to 90% while making the plant much safer, according to United Electric Controls.
Vanguard field-interchangeable gas sensor modules detect and record hydrogen sulfide (H2S) or methane (CH4) gas in parts per million (PPM) or percent of lower explosive limits (LELs) respectively, along with network and battery status. WirelessHART 7.2 technology carries signals to local 128 x 64 pixel digital displays or other IEC 62591 compatible connections — all of which integrate with existing supervisory control and data acquisition (SCADA) or asset management (AMS) systems. The Vanguard beta program will provide companies running operations that generate H2S or CH4 an opportunity to try it out in various settings, including the following applications:
• Wireless remote and local gas detection, such as tank farms, oil and gas production facilities, refineries, pipelines, abandoned wells and waste treatment plants.
• Temporary situations in which the cost of setting up a wired solution is completely unfeasible, such as a maintenance turnaround, natural disaster, security breach or plant expansion.
• Asset management initiatives, where trending of emissions over time through the deployment of multiple wireless sensors can initiate the necessary predictive and preventive maintenance, or pollution control monitoring.
Companies who agree to complete feedback surveys will get free use of a system for 60 days, according to the company. A United Electric Controls installation team will assist in the commissioning at the end users’ facility.
For more information, visit: www.ueonline.com