
List Price :
$595.00Price : $548.85
Code : B008TVSQU8
* Special discount only for limited time

Product Feature
- American made LND 7317, Two-Inch Pancake GM Tube; detects alpha, beta, gamma and x-radiation
- Scan items for radiation and detect Naturally Occurring Radioactive Materials (NORM)
- Measurement Range 0.001 to 125 mR/hr (0.01 to 1,250 uSv/hr) with +/- 10 percent typical accuracy
- Monitors Elapsed Time, Average, Minimum and Maximum dose rate in uR/hr, mR/hr, uSv/hr, CPS or CPM
- LED, beeper and headphone jack; internal data logging, timed measurements, dose rate alarm
Product Description
The PRM-9000 includes the same two-inch (50.8 mm) pancake Geiger detector tube that is the gold-standard for surveying areas for potentially harmful ionizing radiation levels and for detecting radioactive contamination of packages, items, equipment and people. The instrument is suitable for regulatory inspections, and for the detection, measurement and monitoring of broad spectrum, low energy radionuclides, including Naturally Occurring Radioactive Material (NORM). The two-line, alphanumeric display supports both English and Japanese languages promoting ease-of-use and concise measurement. The display is backlit to support low-light conditions. Using only one key, users can scroll through several screens that display present, average, maximum and minimum measurements in uR/hr, mR/hr, uSv/hr, Counts per Second (CPS) or Counts per Minute (CPM). The PRM-9000 instrument not only records the maximum radiation measured, but also displays the time and date at which the maximum occurred. Battery life is over 4-years under normal conditions from a single, readily-available, 9-volt lithium battery that is user-installable without soldering. Standard alkaline 9-volt batteries available everywhere provide over 2-years of life under normal conditions. With over 100K bytes of data logging memory included, the PRM-9000 can autonomously store up to 91,466 minutes or hours of time-stamped measurements. These measurements can then be uploaded to a PC in CSV format for analysis. A user-settable dose rate alarm sounds an audible alert when the measured radiation level exceeds that of the alarm level setting. Designed by Mazur Instruments and manufactured in the USA, the PRM-9000 includes abundant I/O options including support for headphones, external speakers, external power and PC/Mac USB data exchange (requires optional 3.5mm to USB adapter cable). Minimum energy sensitivity alpha (2.5 MeV), beta (50 keV), gamma/X rays (10 keV). Gamma sensitivity: 3,500 CPM/mR/hr (Cs-137).
Product Detail
- Amazon Sales Rank: #11725 in BISS
- Brand: Mazur Instruments
- Model: PRM-9000
- Number of items: 1
- Dimensions: 1.37" h x3.25" w x5.63" l,1.45 pounds
Maybe you should visit the following website to get a better price and specification details
Related Seller :Product Reviews
51 of 52 people found the following review helpful.
Mazur PRM-9000
By Joe in Memphis
This is my review of the Mazur PRM-9000 that actually arrived 3 days early. First, I want to say I am NOT affiliated with any company in this review, and I am a hobbyist regarding the instruments mentioned. The instruments I personally own are: Mazur-PRM 8000, Mazur PRM-9000, SE International Inspector EXP+, and a calibrated and certified Victoreen CD-V-715 1B. I have owned the PRM-8000 since February 2012 and am completely satisfied with its quality.
I am going to compare the Mazur PRM-9000 to the Inspector EXP+ in this review, since they have the same type 1.75" (effective diameter) Geiger-Mueller tube, and should produce similar results. The strongest point for me regarding the Mazur brand of instruments is the ability to LOG data without being tethered to any other device. Just select "Data Logging", in my case I set the interval to "Minute" and "Start" the process when I want to begin, and "Stop" when I am finished. This can be used for very long measurements since it is capable of storing 91,466 minutes or hours' worth of data depending on your settings. Each stored data point contains the date, time, and counts per minute. This can be transferred to a computer with a free program called TeraTerm, and graphed in Excel. My other brand detectors are incapable of doing this since they have no internal memory. The Mazur instruments can also be set to monitor for a preset duration of 1, 5, 10, 20, 30, 60, or 90 minutes, and will give you your data in whichever unit you specify, uR/hr, mR/hr, uS/hr, CPS, or CPM, already calculated for you in the counts or dose rate you specify, no further calculations are necessary. This is not possible with the Inspector, in which you set your time duration, and it gives you total counts for the time set, then you do the math to get your CPM or CPS, the timer does not function in any other mode than "Total / Timer", so no direct readout of CPM, CPS, mR/hr, or uS/hr is possible during a timed reading. If you need to monitor a project for longer than 90 minutes that is not a problem, just reset the counters in the PRM-9000, and let it run for hours, weeks, or months, and it will continue to update the minimum, maximum, average, and current counts. This would be a good time to use the data logging feature I mentioned above. I am not familiar with any other units that have the minimum, maximum, average, and time of maximum information displayed. The Mazur units I own are very well built, have backlit displays, and the user interface is second to none. They are very easy to use and interpret the data they output. Another thing that is a big plus is the time the unit can run on a single 9V battery. The battery life is stated to be 20,150 HOURS or 2.3 YEARS at normal background levels, this is a really nice feature since the unit is designed to be always on. The specifications on my PRM-8000 are for 28,000 HOURS on a single 9V alkaline battery, and I don't doubt the factory's estimate on the battery life is correct. I did recently change my battery on the PRM-8000, but I run it at significantly higher levels as you will see in the tests below, thus the shorter battery life. I still got 8 MONTHS out of a single battery. Being always on is a great feature, since it is always monitoring background, and its alarm will alert you if the background radiation level exceeds your set point. Maximum is constantly updated with the time it occurred as long as the unit is on.
I ran a few comparison tests with the Mazur PRM-9000 and the Inspector EXP+, all timed tests were 10 minutes long unless otherwise noted. The first test was with both units sitting next to each other on a wooden countertop reading background radiation only. The PRM-9000 logged 24,081 counts for 29.7 CPM and the Inspector EXP+ logged 25,169 counts for 31.0 CPM. This was over a 13.5 hour period (810 minutes). The second test was with a Uranium doped glass bead at the same distance from each Geiger-Mueller tube. The PRM-9000 yielded 3149 counts, for 314.9 CPM, and the EXP+ logged 3119 counts for 311.9 CPM. The third test is an interesting one, it started raining so I did a 10 minute count of my countertop and a paper towel with both units, and then went out and saturated the towel with rain from the hood of my car. The background count with the PRM-9000 was 29 CPM, and the rain soaked paper towel is 92.4 CPM yielding a count of 63.4 CPM for the rain alone, and the EXP+ logged 30 CPM for background, and 104.3 for the wet paper towel, yielding a count of 74.3 for the rain alone. The GM tubes were kept at equal distances from the test subject, and both counts were made at the same time. This is a nice test to see how they work in a real scenario of testing for contamination in food or water. Do I need to worry that a local nuclear power plant has released contaminants? Perhaps we are getting the remains from a nuclear disaster far away?? No, it is just naturally occurring Radon and its progeny in the atmosphere being brought down and concentrated by the rain, and I am sure a few contaminants on the hood itself. This does show that both units are very capable of testing for contaminants. With the Mazur PRM-9000 I was able to set up data logging and let it continue to collect data for the next 6 hours, and I was able to see on a graph the rate that the sample decayed back to nothing more than background radiation (about 2.5 hours). The fourth test I did was with a small Depression glass vase, it has a base the same size as the sensors, so it was easy to locate the sensors in the same place on the base of the vase. The PRM-9000 logged 27,056 counts, for 2705.6 CPM. The Inspector EXP+ logged 28,620 counts, for 2862.0 CPM. The fifth and last test in this review is from a "ball pitcher" with orange glaze of the same type found on Fiesta Ware. This is a relatively "hot" piece, and I wanted to see how the detectors would handle a more active test target. The PRM-9000 logged 153,980 counts, for 15,398 CPM, and the EXP+ logged 142.9 (X1000) counts, for 14,290 CPM, both over a 10 minute time period. Note that the EXP+ only has four active digits on its display, and has to illuminate the "X 1000" multiplier.
To conclude this review, I have to say it is a very clean looking, well built, user friendly Geiger counter with all the bells and whistles I could ever want and more. If you are considering the purchase of a Geiger counter for emergencies, checking for contamination in food and water, or to experiment with the things around you, I would strongly recommend you give this one a close look. It has so many more features than its competition.
22 of 25 people found the following review helpful.
60 Day Warranty On The GM Pancake Tube
By Brian815
I own a Mazur PRM-9000, an InspectorEXP and a Black Cat Systems GM-45 which all three have the pancake GM tubes. I also own a GQ GMC-300 and many GQ GMC-200 units which are not as sensitive as the pancake GM tubes but are much more durable and when used with graphing software can easily show a climb in background radiation levels in your area. I have bought all these units at different times and they range new from $85 up to $500+
Although the pancake style GM tube as in the Mazur 9000 are very sensitive, they are very delicate too and if you look in to the warranty on them you will find it is only a 60 day warranty. A 60 day warranty is not much when spending hundreds of dollars on the unit and this warranty means that at 61 days after purchase if the pancake GM tube stops working on its own, sorry you are out of luck!
If you plan on connecting the geiger counter to a free software online radiation monitoring site like NETC.com or maybe the pay software site like Radiation Network, the Mazur PRM-9000 internal memory features will likely not be needed because your real-time data can be saved on your computer. If you want to do field testing on soil or maybe in the dentist office or hospital, those internal memory Mazur PRM-9000 features will be useful.
I recently replaced my Mazur PRM-9000 battery for the first time and it was a pain. With a slip of the hand while changing the battery, you can break the Mazur PRM-9000. The four screws you see on the face of the unit need to all be removed. The top cover has a ribbon cable that goes to the screen attached to the top cover. Be careful when taking off the top cover so you do not damage this ribbon cable. The 9-volt battery is located inside and very close to a vertical circuit board inside the Mazur PRM-9000. It is this vertical circuit board you could most likely damage while changing the battery, which will trash your unit. Ask the manufacture to see a picture inside the unit and then you will understand what I am talking about. I was unable to find any pictures on the internet showing inside. I do not want to disassemble my unit again just to take a picture, it is not worth risking damage to my unit just for pictures.
None of the pancake GM tube model geiger counter units on the market are durable when compared to the other type of GM tubes. Looking at the manufacture warranty of simply 60 days tells us that fact. It is the trade off for the sensitivity due to the design of that pancake GM tube. Remember that having the most sensitive geiger unit (pancake GM tube models - and most expensive) is not needed to detect a rise of background radiation levels in your area provided that you are using a graphing program with the data being collected.
9 of 9 people found the following review helpful.
Kinda pricey but you get what you pay for with this instrument
By David C. Massey
If you want a Geiger counter that detects alpha, beta, gamma, and x-rays and will continously monitor for unsafe levels of radiation for over two years without changing the battery this is the best choice out there. There is a user-selectable alarm level that can be set and with the optional USB cable and software ([...]) you can log the data collected over time plus share radiation data in real time over the Internet. This allows you to monitor data through a Radiation Map and a series of Remote Graphs. I just ordered the software so can't give any feedback yet on how well it works with the Mazur PRM-9000.
0 comments:
Post a Comment