No, I don't. They remind me of the joke where a drunk is searching under a street light for something and another drunk decides to help search. After while the second drunk asks "are you sure you lost it here?" and the first drunk replied "no, I lost it over there, but the light is better here". In other words, I've found strap on ultrasonics to be crap measurement, but they are easy to install. Any ultrasonic finds changing conditions difficult. With varying temperature I am pretty sure a strap on ultrasonic would consistently give you numbers. I'm not quite as sure that those numbers would consistently relate to the fluid flow.
As to pitot tubes, I am starting to see a lot of them going in. Thankfully, I am also seeing a lot of them come back out after a few months. No one in my experience does very good at caring for and feeding pitot tubes. They have to be recalibrated for every change in density or fluid composition. For wellsite use, the fluid can change more than the meter can tolerate several times per second. They are fine in a very well controlled, very clean service, but any variability disqualifies them in my opinion. The temperature variability that the OP mentioned would disqualify them I think.
I forgot to mention in my first post, that I've had pretty good results with Vortex meters in water service over the last few years.
If I had to rank the choices for this application I'd look at V-Cone, Vortex, Mag Flow, [eight or nine blank spaces], or Coriolis Meter.
David Simpson, PE
MuleShoe Engineering
"Belief" is the acceptance of an hypotheses in the absence of data.
"Prejudice" is having an opinion not supported by the preponderance of the data.
"Knowledge" is only found through the accumulation and analysis of data.
The plural of anecdote is not "data"