CD V-750 Model 6 Dosimeter Charger R & D Prototype |
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The primary purpose of the Model CD V-750 was to charge civil defense
dosimeters (CD V-138, 730, 740, and 742). By charge, we mean adjust the
dosimeter so that the quartz fiber, visible through the eyepiece as a fine
line running vertically across the scale, is set at zero. What
most people think of when they think of a dosimeter charger (which is not
that often), is a 4" x 4" x 2" box with a knob and charging
contact on
the top and a flashlight battery inside (e.g., Models 1 - 5 of the CD
V-750). There are other types however.
Several civil defense instruments were identified in Radiological Instruments: An Essential Resource for National Preparedness (September 1986) as being under development during the 1980s. One of these was “a piezoelectric charger for dosimeters developed at Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL).” Later, this device became the CD V-750 Model 6. |
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The charger shown here is an R & D prototype of the Model 6 that was produced in the 1970s. Details of its construction can be found in US Patent Number 4,494,002 Pistol-Shaped Dosimeter Charger. By squeezing the trigger, a stress is created on a piezoelectric crystal. This stress produces the potential that is used to charge the dosimeter. The beauty of it is that it requires no batteries! Donated by one of its developers, Frank Manning. |
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Last updated: 07/25/07
Copyright 1999, Oak Ridge Associated Universities