Invacare HomeFill II Oxygen Cylinder Refill
Product Highlights
- Small and lightweight
- Compress oxygen in the comfort of the home
- Simultaneous concentrator and refill functionality
- Compatible with oxygen cylinders in sizes M2, ML4, ML6, M6, M9, and D
- Easy connection and controls
- Fast Delivery
- Rx or Professional License Required
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Description
Invacare HomeFill II Oxygen Cylinder Refill Compressor - Product Number IOH200
HomeFill II Oxygen System by Invacare is a Home Oxygen Refill System that allows for the refill of oxygen tanks or cylinders from the comfort of your home. The HomeFill machine refills high-pressure oxygen cylinders from a concentrator. The device is a multi-stage pump that simply and safely compresses O2 delivered from an Invacare 5-liter or a 10-liter oxygen concentrator into oxygen cylinders in sizes M2, ML4, ML6, M6, M9, and D. The ability to fill cylinders at home provides greater independence and freedom for individuals who use oxygen concentrators, like the Perfecto 2 Concentrator. Home care providers will also benefit from the virtual elimination of time-consuming and costly service calls often associated with cylinder or liquid oxygen deliveries.
The Invacare HomeFill II System is compatible with both the aforementioned 5 Liter Perfecto 2, as well as the Platinum 10 XL Concentrator, a 10 Liter machine. Oxygen Concentrators are sold separately.
HomeFill Package with ML-6 Cylinders - IOH200PC Components
- Connection and Controls Are Designed For Easy Operation.
- IOH260 HomeFill Ready Rack.
- 2 HomeFill ML6 Cylinders with Integrated Conserver.
- ML-6 Cylinder Carrying Bag.
HomeFill Package with ML9 Cylinders - IOH200PC9 Components
- HomeFill IOH200.
- IOH260 Ready Rack.
- 2 HomeFill ML9 Cylinders with Integrated Conserver.
- ML-6 Cylinder Carrying Bag.
Product Features & Benefits
- Users can fill cylinders while still using concentrator.
- Provides ambulatory O2 patients greater freedom and independence.
- Virtually eliminates the high service costs of frequent deliveries of cylinders or tanks.
- Small and lightweight.
- Long warranty period
Product Specifications
- Product Number: IOH200.
- Width: 20.25"
- Height: 15"
- Depth: 16"
- Weight: 33 lbs.
- Noise: Not available from Invacare.
- Maxium Output Pressure: 2,000 ± 100 PSI.
- O2Concentration Level: 90% or higher.
- Maximum Operating Altitude: 6,000 feet above sea level.
- O2 Output: From 5-Liter Concentrator: 0-3 LPM (While Filling Cylinder) Input: 0-2 LPM.
- Cylinder Filling Times: M2: 24 Min; ML4: 55 Min; ML6: 75 Min; M6: 60 Min; M9: 125 Min; D 3.5 Hrs.
- Electrical: 120 VAC +- 10% at 60 Hz.
- Power: Consumption: 200 Watts
- Rated Current Input: 2.0 amps.
- Manufacturer: Invacare.
- HCPCS Code: K0738.
- Warranty: 1 Year
- Warranty For Parts and Labor On Internal-Wear Components & Control-Panel Components: 3-year (or 5,000-hour).
Please note: oxygen concentrators are for supplemental use NOT as a primary source of oxygen. The user may experience periods of inactivity due to interruption in electrical power or the need to have the device repaired.
The customer is responsible to arrange a backup source of supplementary oxygen in case of device failure. Vitality Medical assumes no liability for failure to provide a backup or the failure to adhere to manufacturer recommendations.
Additional Information
Refill Station Resources
- Owner Manual supplies operating instruction.
- Specifications offers details on refill station.
- Warranty indicates the warranty coverage and length of time.
Home Fill Oxygen Concentrator Unit Set Up Video Transcriptions
Speaker 1:
Today we're going to go over the home fill, I'm going to go over that first. Everybody knows that a home fill is, it's what you fill your tanks on in a patient's home. A couple pieces of equipment that you're going to need is the home fill unit, the rack system, the concentrator and of course the line that's going to connect the two so you can fill the tanks and the tank that goes with it.
One of the things about the home fill system is that when you turn on the concentrator you need to have the liter filled at least at two and no higher than three on a five liter concentrator. It takes at least two liters to fill the tanks off on a home fill.
If a patient is ordered on four liters they can't have a home fill system unless we convert them over to a 10 liter concentrator. Make sure your flow meter is set to two no higher than three, you're going to have a piece of tubing that's going to go between the two of them, they fit in here and you just bring it over the green thing on the bottom.
When you go to fill a tank you want to make sure that the tank is in the off position, it says off. You take your caps off, you want to make sure that the machine is turned off, then you take off the cap. You line up the gold pin right over the hole, then click it down.
Then when you turn on the machine you're going to hear a couple of alarms. The home fill system is going to say, some of them have a wait light that tells you to wait. This one is just saying low O2, there are a couple of different systems out there.
When they're calling in to troubleshoot and they tell you those lights are on, if it's a wait or if it's a low O2 it could be because the concentrator is not putting out enough oxygen. Therefore the home fill system will not fill the tank, or they've done something wrong. They either have the liter flow, if the liter flow is wrong it's not going to tell you that it just takes a longer time to fill the tank if it's a little under it's going to take a little longer to fill a tank.
A tank this size takes about two hours and forty-five minutes to fill, where the little short one takes maybe two hours and ten minutes to fill, and I've got one of the bigger ones. When it's ready it's going to tell you that it's filling and you're going to hear a churning sound so you can actually hear a difference when it actually goes into the fill cycle on the machine.
When you're troubleshooting something like that that's what you want to kind of find out, if there's any lights on. What the lights are telling the patient, if the lights are telling the patient that it's a wait or if it's a low O2. It could be that the concentrator needs to be switched out.
Speaker 2:
Or if they just turned it on because if they just turned the concentrator and it has been shut off for a while it takes a while for the concentration to build up.
Speaker 1:
That's right, it does take a while for the concentration to build up but if they're still having issues even after, and these should build up air quickly. I think within a few minutes it should start filling here, you can hear a churn and it will start doing it.
If they don't have a tank in the off position when they turn this on, if they don't have it in the off position it will not fill. If it does it's going to kind of spew out but I don't think it will even fill in the off position. There are several things that patients do that kind of boggles me and unless I can visually see what it is they hit to be able to correct it. But on the phone that's just how you can troubleshoot some of this stuff on the phone.
Any questions about what the lights mean, what we're looking for when we're filling the home fill system? Any questions about any trouble you have with on calls with the home fill? Go ahead Karen.
Speaker 3:
Regarding getting the tank to line up, I have a couple of calls that it just won't go in. You did something like you were pressing.
Speaker 1:
Yeah this little silver thing.
Speaker 3:
Did you just push down on the silver thing?
Speaker 1:
Yeah just help it in. Usually it will spring up when the tank's released so that when you pop the tank down it opens it up and opens up the little silver, the little gold head so it will hook on to the pin. But otherwise it's because it didn't position itself from the last fill so sometimes you just have to pull at these little things here to get them to lock down.
Any questions? This is the rack system and then there's a tank system that the home fill will sit on top of. Then we also have the perfecto did you hear it, it just switched so now it's going to tell you again.
Speaker 3:
So that one's not working.
Speaker 1:
It's in the fill, it's saying filling. So after the two hours and 45 minutes if the tank is completely empty it's going to take that long. The machine will actually shut itself off, they can still leave it on they just come over and physically turn it off. A patient can actually leave their home while one of these are filling and it's not going to overfill, it can't overfill.
The machine will automatically cycle off when it hits 2,000. One of the things that the patients are taught when they're filling the tanks, they don't have to have the tank completely empty to refill it. But they do have to have it below the 1,000 mark in order to fill it. If they're at 1,100 all they have to do is bleed off 100 pounds of pressure or maybe 200 pounds of pressure, just open it up at 2 liters continuous and then they can bleed out that and then they can fill it.
They don't have to completely empty their tank because it's going to take another two hours and 45 minutes to fill it. But it does have to be under the 1,000 mark in order to fill, am I right on that? I think there's some newer ones that are coming out that they don't to I heard. I don't think we have any of those.
Speaker 2:
Speaker 1:
About two hours and 10 minutes because you go from a four hour tank to a six hour tank so you got a little more filling time to fill it up because you got a little bit more volume so it's about that time. Most of them...
Most of the patients will fill them before they're even empty.
So let's say that it's finished, I'm going to turn it off okay. Then I'm' going to release the tank by pressing down on the silver and it will pop it up and then it's all finished. Then you just put your cap back on here which I don't see it, hanging on there. Then you should always recap so we don't get any dirt or debris inside of it.
Speaker 2:
A lot of times the problem with that is as simple as don't turn the compressor off before they put the tank on.
Speaker 1:
That's right, their compressor has to be off along with the tank okay. They can't have this turned on and then pop that on there. It will either keep saying it's waiting and it just won't get into the fill cycle. So that's another good troubleshooting tip that some of the patients do.
Speaker 4:
If they turn the compressor on and they try to put the tank in and it's just going to say waiting.
Speaker 1:
It probably won't alarm or anything.
If you're going to have to troubleshoot just tell them to take everything off, turn everything down except for the continuous concentrator because they can use that while they're filling their tank. They can leave this to run all the time but this is what they're going to turn on and off, it definitely has to be off when they're filling a home fill system. The tank has to be off, it can't be on set on the tube.
Speaker 4:
Turn it off until it's connected and then you hit the power on.
Speaker 1:
Other reasons that they wouldn't fill is if their tubing is not securely put in or for some reason they have broke the tip off of this and they don't realize it because they've moved it around, there's going to be a leak so that's not going to fill. If I'm not mistaken there's no alarms for the home fill if there's leaks.
I don't think there are alarms at all, it's not an alarm it's just a light. That's why you're going to have to ask them. If there's an alarm going off it's the concentrator that's going off. If it's producing low O2 it should be either intermittently beeping to let us know that something's wrong and the yellow light should be flashing or the red light and the continuous alarm should be alerting them that something's wrong.
Sometimes patients will go I hear this beeping sound but I'm not quite sure what it is. Is it my smoke detector and usually it's this thing, this intermittent beeping because it's not producing good oxygen something wrong and it needs attention. Some patients will call up and say, "I think my concentrator is beeping." Have you had that happen intermittently when they've called up and said that so usually that's what it is. The concentrator needs to be switched out hand they can easily look to see what the alarm system is.
Any questions about the home fill system and how we're using it?
Additional Information
Manufacturer | Invacare |
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Proposition 65 warning for Californians | WARNING: CANCER AND REPRODUCTIVE HARM - www.P65Warnings.ca.gov |
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