I'm not sure what RWJ's application is, but for an industrial steriliser, the cobalt source is typically contained in a large shielded room (6’ thick concrete walls). The source is stored in a 25' deep pool. The emergency stop is for when the source is in the storage position and personnel are in the cell. Given that there is a lot of conveyor type equipment in there, an E-stop is required. The challenge has always been to find ingenious ways to get anything to survive in the cell. As for the radiation approved components for power reactors, they don’t hold up either. A power reactor, in general, only has a fraction of the gamma field that exists in a steriliser and neutron particles are not very penetrating compared to gamma energy. Typically if a switch can withstand about 4 GRad then it might last 2 or 3 years (depending on the magnitude of the source in the cell) if it doesn’t fail from oxidisation from the high ozone content in the air.