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by rickboyce 1021 days ago
It’s the sensors themselves that have a limited life - the units that have a fixed battery have a battery life that exceeds the sensors useful life.

The common / low cost carbon monoxide detectors use a chemical reaction (either a fuel cell or one of a few reactions that produce a colour change in the presence of CO) - the chemistry degrades with time and exposure causing the sensitivity to drop off over time.

I’m not sure how much of a safety margin they have (like could it still detect dangerous levels at 2x it’s design life or something) but a quality generator would have a life of several times that of a CO sensor at least so replacement will definitely/hopefully be a design consideration.

1 comments

I have a CO sensor for an arduino that I haven't used yet that cost a few dollars. I haven't noticed in the manual any mention of expiration.
https://www.dfrobot.com/product-686.html > MQ7 datasheet > "Its service life can reach 5 years under using condition."