they were formed. Feedback was employed to reduce the chamber voltage as the amount of radiation increased. Even though the amplifier was linear, the combined effect was to produce a nonlinear scale on the meter. The componentsin the indicator unit included a transistor amplifier, a built-in alarm system, batteries, a built-in calibration source, and a direct~reading meter. The amplifier had a small current for an input. An output current of up to 1.0 ma operated the indicator. One feedback potential was developed across the metering circuit and varied — TOT \ 5.0 1.0 \ QO 2.0}— Jaa eee EXTRAPOLATED \ ‘ = N \ i —~— 05 u s w ~ TTT TOT TT Lt ° + wa aa . — _~y S - of 4a . a oz w wn 9° a of . ¥ 0.08 — 7 a02-— or t Lt 2 tli Lt tiie 5 10 20 DISTANCE FROM WINDOW INCHES 50 109 Figure 2.11 Calibration curve for 500-curie Co™ source. from 0 to about 20 volts. Another feedback voltage to the chamber was applied to the positive end of the chamber voltage battery. A schematic diagram of the detector and indicator is shown in Figure 2.14. There was a built-in alarm system incorporated in the MG-3 unit. When the radiation level reached approximately 0.5 r/hr, a relay was closed and an alarm buzzer was turned on. Power for the unit was supplied by six batteries ranging from 1 to 21 volts. The normallife of all the batteries was 6 months of continuous operation. The battery that operated the alarm could operate continuously for 18 hours with the alarm turned on. 23

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