We haven't seen this here.  Do you know if they were using a sub station?  
There are preference settings for sub stations which will turn the dosimeter 
off when changing RWPs or leave it on and just reset the set points and dose 
total depending on which you select, which may be a contributor to this if it 
happened at a substation and the preference was set to turn it off.

When changing RWPs at the primary station the system requires the worker to 
remove the dosimeter from near the reader in order to start a new log in 
transaction.

We use the DMC-2000S with the LDM -200 reader, the log in screen has a message 
that displays not to remove the dosimeter until it has been programmed, the 
screen turns green and states access permitted when it's ready.

Cathy Dole
Senior Radiation Protection Analyst
ALARA Coordinator


From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
Courtenay, Christopher C
Sent: Wednesday, November 02, 2011 7:38 AM
To: [email protected]
Cc: Jonas, Kathy L; Litaker, Jeffrey R; Morgan, Steven L; Marek, Jeff
Subject: Powernet: ED Turned Off in RCA

Duke Energy would like to know if anyone has or is experiencing the following:

ED (electronic dosimeter) problems being experienced when changing RWPs 
(Radiation Work Permits).

When change RWPs the ED is turned off and back on to write the new RWP dose and 
dose rate alarm set points to the ED.

Currently, the following is randomly occurring:  After the ED is turned off and 
the worker is logged onto the new RWP in Sentinel,  the following error message 
occurs on the kiosk   'ACCESS DENIED   The Dosimeter has been removed from the 
Reader!'. The worker has not removed the ED from the reader. The results is the 
worker is logged into the RCA/RCZ with an inactivated ED.

Duke Energy uses Sentinel 1.09 and the DMC2000S ED.  Has anyone else 
experienced this on a more than "normal" basis?  What is the age of your 
dosimeters?  What LDM readers do you use?  What is the configuration of your 
LDM readers and access stations? (Duke uses an LDM101 shell with LDM220 reader 
inside, facing down, on some stations)  Any experience or insight would be 
greatly appreciated.

Chris Courtenay
Engineer, Duke Energy
980-875-5005
"To the optimist, the glass is half full.  To the pessimist, the glass is half 
empty.  To the engineer, the glass is twice as big as it needs to be."

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