Vietnam built a radioactivity meter for warships
The Institute of Chemistry - Military Environment, the Chemical Army has successfully built a radioactive meter equipped for naval ships for training, ready to fight.
The PX-6KT radioactivity meter has a weight of 10kg, is designed to be robust, withstand shock, suitable for the marine environment and is capable of working stably after a minute of opening.
PX-6KT radioactivity meter for warships.
With 6 stainless steel probes, it is capable of recording gamma radiation on 6 channels, indicating the results with a liquid crystal display. Threshold radiation warning is set on demand, capable of automatically alerting when entering the contaminated area.
The PX-6KT radioactivity meter uses microcontroller technique so it has high working efficiency, can work stably in conditions of humidity less than 98%.
Currently, many naval ships in the military service are using KDU-2M or KDU-5 radioactivity meters with long usage time, indicating the results in watches so the measurement results are missing. Accurate, difficult to operate.
Replacing these meters with a PX-6KT radioactivity meter will contribute to improving the military's readiness to fight.
- Radioactivity in the air of Vietnam plummeted
- When modern warships confront ... sea storms
- New materials help Chinese warships
- Radioactivity in the air in Hanoi tends to decrease
- Monkeys measure radiation in Japan
- Vietnam produces radar-absorbing paint
- Vietnam owns high technology in the field of mechanical engineering
- Vietnam is going to have a diabetes meter without blood injection?
- Seamless water battleship does not rival the US Navy
- Detecting some residential areas with high radioactivity
- Radioactivity in rainwater has almost fallen
- Detecting the wreck of the ship under the reign of Kublai Khan