llamallama
Civil/Environmental
- Dec 9, 2009
- 27
All,
I need to know the factors effecting the accuracy of a clamp-on ultrasonic flow meter. I recently purchased one to do some in-plant potable water conservation work. It was an Economy-bay model and the tech support is non-existent, but it was what I could sneak in under the budget. It seems to be repeatable, and I believe it could be set up to be fairly accurate. Also, the pipe is new installation, so buildup of scaling or corrosion isn't likely. And the problem persists on several installation locations. The problem is this:
The meter asks for various parameters which I have entered as accurately as I can. From that information the unit calculates a spacing for the installation of the transducers (which I set with calipers). Based on all that it outputs flow rate along with the ratio of the measured speed of sound in the fluid to the theoretical. This ratio is fairly high and the instructions say to check the transducer installation if that occurs. My question is, should I accept the flow rate as accurate with the measured speed of sound 85-90% of the theoretical, or adjust the transducer spacing until the theoretical and measured speed of sound align? Or adjust some other parameter. I'm assuming the meter calculates the length of the travel path based on the user input.
Input parameters I've double checked as correct: Pipe diameter (4.50"), Pipe wall thickness (0.12"), Pipe material (Stainless), Liquid (water 20C), Transducer style (TS-2 from the nameplate), Transducer setup (V arrangement), Pipe Lining (None).
Output: sound velocity (1251 m/s), flow rate (49.xx gpm), signal strength out of 99.9 (88.9, 89.1), signal quality out of 100% (94%).
Any help would be appreciated.
I need to know the factors effecting the accuracy of a clamp-on ultrasonic flow meter. I recently purchased one to do some in-plant potable water conservation work. It was an Economy-bay model and the tech support is non-existent, but it was what I could sneak in under the budget. It seems to be repeatable, and I believe it could be set up to be fairly accurate. Also, the pipe is new installation, so buildup of scaling or corrosion isn't likely. And the problem persists on several installation locations. The problem is this:
The meter asks for various parameters which I have entered as accurately as I can. From that information the unit calculates a spacing for the installation of the transducers (which I set with calipers). Based on all that it outputs flow rate along with the ratio of the measured speed of sound in the fluid to the theoretical. This ratio is fairly high and the instructions say to check the transducer installation if that occurs. My question is, should I accept the flow rate as accurate with the measured speed of sound 85-90% of the theoretical, or adjust the transducer spacing until the theoretical and measured speed of sound align? Or adjust some other parameter. I'm assuming the meter calculates the length of the travel path based on the user input.
Input parameters I've double checked as correct: Pipe diameter (4.50"), Pipe wall thickness (0.12"), Pipe material (Stainless), Liquid (water 20C), Transducer style (TS-2 from the nameplate), Transducer setup (V arrangement), Pipe Lining (None).
Output: sound velocity (1251 m/s), flow rate (49.xx gpm), signal strength out of 99.9 (88.9, 89.1), signal quality out of 100% (94%).
Any help would be appreciated.