Flow Meter Calibration

Powerpro provides flow calibration services for a variety of flow instruments including flow meter calibration, anemometer calibration, Gas, Liquid and Mass, Hydrometer Calibration, Glass Tube, Mass flowmeter, Electromagnetic flow meter, Ultrasonic flow meter and more.Â
Flow Meter Calibration
It is common to make measurements using a combination of several instruments acting together. It is also appropriate to calibrate different portions of such a system by different methods.
In the case of a flowmeter with a transmitter and an indicator, a common practice is to wet calibrate the flowmeter and separately dry calibrate the transmitter and indicator. You can often further separate the flowmeter itself into a wetted primary (the portion generating the flow signal) and a flow secondary (the portion providing the signal processing).Â
Whenever separately calibrating portions of a system, maintain adequate accuracy rations for each calibration and calculate the overall system accuracy by the previously described method. Here are the kinds of Calibration we offer:
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Wet Calibration
A wet calibration, using actual fluid flow, normally provides the highest calibration accuracy for a flowmeter and sees use where accuracy is a prime concern or when the form of the meter does not lend itself to other methods. Precision flowmeters usually see wet calibration at the time of manufacture.
After service, the user often removes and recalibrates them. The actual interval between these calibrations varies depending on the user’s experience with the meter and the importance of the measurement.
You can perform the recalibration at the flowmeter manufacturers’ facility, in an independent laboratory, or at the user’s site when adequate facilities are available. When performing the calibration at an outside facility, specify the flow range you want to calibrate, the number of points you are taking, and the fluid viscosity (if you are using something other than water at room temperature).
If you are using the flowmeter for billing or other accounting purposes, you might want to obtain an as-received and after-adjustment calibration. The as-received results enable evaluating what magnitude of error may have existed in the meter during use, prior to recalibration. If this error is large, evaluate the impact of the error on prior measurements and determine whether additional action is required.
The procedures outside laboratories should follow in calibrations are normally left to the discretion of the laboratory. You can specify a system calibration, where you calibrate all elements of the flow measuring system together, when accuracy is critical.
We usually perform wet calibrations with water, air, or hydrocarbon fuels using one or more of four basic standards: weight tanks, volumetric tanks, pipe provers, or master flowmeters.
Weight, volume standards
Three methods of calibration see use when a weight or volume tank is the standard. In the static calibration method, the flow starts quickly to begin the test, holds steady during the test, and then shuts off at the end of the test. Compare the totalized reading from the flowmeter with the weight or volume you collect and calculate the meter performance.
A static system operates best with flowmeters that have minimum sensitivity to low flow rates. It does not give optimum results with high-performance digital output meters, such as vortex flowmeters, because of errors obtained during the short periods of low flow at the beginning and end of the test. For this reason, static symptoms are no longer in general use.
A weight or volume standard can also be used in a completely dynamic mode. In this method, the flow is set at a steady rate before the start of the test. The flowmeter reading and initial weight or volume are read simultaneously to start the test and again, after the desired collection period, to end the test. Completely dynamic systems are limited by speed or response consideration and the general difficulties used.
Master Flow meters
Perhaps the most common method of wet calibration is comparing the output of the meter under test with one or more flowmeters that have been certified against high-accuracy standards, known as master flowmeters. You can construct a small master meter comparison test stand at less cost than other wet calibration methods.
POWERPROÂ is a one-stop-shop for all your calibration and testing needs.
For more information, please contact us at (0908 793 9482) or use our contact form.
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