@@ -10,7 +10,7 @@ If you receive an alarm on the gas, you need to come to LCSB.
1. A first method to identify which type of bottle is empty is to check on the gas panel in the corridor of the 4th floor in BT1 and room 104, 1st floor in BT2.
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* If one LED is on, one couple of bottle is empty, only one couple of bottles needs to be replaced.
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@@ -24,16 +24,14 @@ If the manometer (5 in the picture below) displays 0 bar, this means that the co
4. If you can see on the “Gas Bottle Exchange Sheet” in the room that the CO2 bottles have already been changed in the 48 h prior to the alarm, this is indicative of a pipeline infrastructure break down → see P6: gas network total failure back up plan.
5. Replace the empty bottles in room 005 of BT1 or LT03 of BT2, ground floor
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|*Personal protective equipment*|
|:-----------------------------:|
|Lab coat|
|Safety goggles|
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* Check the gas level on the manometer (5 on the picture). When empty, it displays 0 bar.
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@@ -51,13 +49,13 @@ If the manometer (5 in the picture below) displays 0 bar, this means that the co
6. Check for any leak after connecting the bottle using the leak detector spray located in the gas deposit room, an example is shown on the picture below
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7. Fill up the “gas bottle exchange record sheet” (Appendix 03) on the door inside the gas deposit room. A copy of this document is present in each gas deposit room