I'm on about my 20th sensor and, believe me, I still jump a bit when it clicks! Compared to the dexcom insertor, which looks a bit like something you'd use for gelding cattle, it's a neat design, but there's always that sense of I'm pressing, pressing, not clicked yet, when will it click.... Although I think maybe part of the tension is thinking, jeesh have I just forked out 50 quid for a duff sensor which won't click!
Hope you enjoy it. I've found it invaluable. First week was just really watching out for hypos and catching them before they happened. Next week was learning just how little sugar was needed to head off a hypo at the pass, sometimes 4 or 5 gms is enought to tweak it back up long before it hits 4. Then there's seeing that quick foot on floor stab up in the morning and learning 2u will pin that just fine. And then white rice a nightmare (well, kinda knew that anyway!}, but brown rice fine. And, and and... Ten months using it, and I'm still learning from it. Don't know if you've read Sugar Surfing by Stephen Ponder. Compared to DAFNE, which tells you to not test between meals unless feeling hypo, and save corrections until meals, it's a whole new paradigm, being able to tweak and nudge on the fly before out of range happens. It's like wearing a bespoke suit instead of an off the shelf job. I'm at peace with my T1 purely because libre takes a lot of the guesswork out
Anyway, after pre-ordering in March, I've finally got a note through my door saying I've to pop round to the post office to pay some import tax on a parcel, so I'm heading round there now to pick up my Ambrosia Systems Blucon Nightrider. It's an NFC reader which goes on top of the sensor and then bluetooths results to a phone every five minutes. I only pre-ordered because they said it would alert for out of range, but then they changed their minds and said that would come in later versions! They're being coy about when or if that will happen. Might see if one of our IT boys can hack it... Assuming the **** thing works at all.