Home>Products

hydrostatic level sensor principle

Selecting Kingmach hydrostatic level sensor principle begins with the scale and shape of expected movement. A single embedded point, a hydrostatic comparison line, a wide-range profile, and a magnetic ring borehole answer different questions. JMDL-47XXAT covers 100 mm to 400 mm embedded settlement. JMDL-62XXADT and JMQJ-62XXADT provide 0.01 mm hydrostatic resolution for smaller vertical changes. JMYC-62XXAD covers 500 mm to 4000 mm with 0.1 mm resolution and 0.2%FS accuracy for larger movement. JMCJ-1003/1005 provides plus or minus 1 mm depth reading for magnetic ring settlement and water level checks. Selection should consider whether the structure will remain accessible, whether groundwater is part of the risk, whether automatic collection is required, and whether the reference point can remain stable for the full observation period. A short-range high-resolution instrument is not automatically better if the site may move beyond its travel. A large-range system is not always best if the project needs very small early warnings.

Application of  hydrostatic level sensor principle

Application of hydrostatic level sensor principle

Integrated structural health monitoring uses hydrostatic level sensor principle as the vertical deformation layer within a larger data set. Settlement rarely explains a site by itself; it usually needs to be read with tilt, strain, load, pore pressure, displacement, water level, rainfall, vibration, and inspection findings. Kingmach settlement products support several measurement styles, including embedded single-point gauges for foundations and subgrades, hydrostatic level sensors for multi-point comparison, wide-range differential pressure instruments for long profiles, and magnetic ring gauges for layered soil observation. Before installation, each point should have a reason: a pier bearing seat, a soft ground section, a basement wall, a tunnel invert, or a dam gallery position. The alarm logic should then match that reason, not just a generic number. For example, a slow uniform drift across all hydrostatic channels may mean something different from one local point moving against a steady reference. A well organized system keeps channel names, drawings, baselines, thresholds, and inspection duties connected so the team can act on the signal instead of debating where it came from.

The future of hydrostatic level sensor principle

The future of hydrostatic level sensor principle

The future of hydrostatic level sensor principle will also depend on better installation kits. Many settlement errors begin with field details: a tube is kinked, a plate is disturbed during compaction, a ring depth is recorded poorly, a cable exits at the wrong place, or a reference point is not protected. Future products can reduce these problems with clearer connectors, pre-labeled cables, stronger side-exit protection, better probe markings, and commissioning checklists. Kingmach JMDL-47XXAT already uses side-exit cable routing to avoid pavement compaction interference, and hydrostatic systems rely on clean tube installation. Better installation accessories will make the first baseline more trustworthy. In settlement monitoring, a clean start is often more useful than a later attempt to correct a poor record. The practical goal is to keep settlement data understandable after the original installation crew has left, so owners can compare old and new readings without reconstructing the field history from memory. The same record should remain readable for designers, contractors, owners, and maintenance teams, because settlement monitoring often continues long after the first construction report is finished.

Care & Maintenance of hydrostatic level sensor principle

Care & Maintenance of hydrostatic level sensor principle

Waterproofing and cabinet care matter for hydrostatic level sensor principle because many points work in wet foundations, dams, tunnels, slopes, and outdoor subgrades. Kingmach JMQJ-62XXADT lists IP68 protection, but connectors, cable glands, tubes, and cabinets still need inspection after heavy rain, flooding, dewatering, or washdown. Check for moisture inside junction boxes, loose terminals, damaged jackets, blocked cabinet drainage, and strain on cable entries. If a remote channel drops after a storm, inspect power supply and communication wiring before replacing the instrument. Keep spare seals, glands, connectors, labels, and drying materials available for field crews. Waterproof maintenance should be logged with date, location, weather, observed fault, repair action, and next reading. That record helps distinguish a real settlement change from a wet connector or cabinet fault.

Kingmach hydrostatic level sensor principle

For dams and water-related structures, hydrostatic level sensor principle must be read together with hydraulic conditions. Dam settlement, bridge deflection near water, dyke compression, and foundation deformation may respond to reservoir level, seepage, rainfall, temperature, and seasonal operation. Kingmach JMQJ-62XXADT and JMDL-62XXADT hydrostatic sensors can support multi-point vertical deformation monitoring, while JMCJ-1003/1005 can add groundwater level and layered settlement information. The field record should identify reference point, tube layout, cabinet position, water level, and inspection date. A reading after heavy rain has a different meaning from the same reading during a dry operating period. Settlement data becomes stronger when it is tied to the water story around the structure. The practical aim is a traceable vertical movement history that can support construction control, maintenance planning, and risk review without rewriting the site story. The practical aim is a traceable vertical movement history that can support construction control, maintenance planning, and risk review without rewriting the site story.

FAQ

  • Q: Which hydrostatic level sensor principle fit hydrostatic leveling?
    A: JMDL-62XXADT, JMQJ-62XXADT, and JMYC-62XXAD are used for hydrostatic or differential pressure settlement monitoring.

    Q: What resolution is available?
    A: JMDL-62XXADT and JMQJ-62XXADT list 0.01 mm resolution, while JMYC-62XXAD lists 0.1 mm resolution for wider ranges.

    Q: Where are micro range hydrostatic sensors used?
    A: They are used for dam settlement, bridge deflection, slope stability, building settlement, tunnel settlement, and subgrade settlement.

    Q: What protection rating is listed for JMQJ-62XXADT?
    A: The product information lists IP68 protection.

    Q: What can damage hydrostatic readings?
    A: Leaking tubes, air pockets, poor reference control, temperature effects, cable faults, and disturbed sensor elevations can all affect the record.

Reviews

David Wilson

We purchased displacement transducers and settlement sensors, and the quality exceeded our expectations. Easy installation and reliable performance.

Matthew Garcia

Instrumentation cables are durable and perform well even in harsh environments. Will definitely order again.

Latest Inquiries

To protect the privacy of our buyers, only public service email domains like Gmail, Yahoo, and MSN will be displayed. Additionally, only a limited portion of the inquiry content will be shown.

Mia***@gmail.comNetherlands

Dear team, we are interested in your readouts & data loggers compatible with multiple sensors. Do yo...

Amelia***@gmail.comSingapore

Hello, I am looking for visualization software for monitoring system data analysis. Please let me kn...

Not finding what you're looking for?
Contact our consultants for more available products.

Request A Quote Now

GET IN TOUCH

If you are interested in our products or want to become our partner.

Please leave your contact information, our team will contact you as soon as possible.

Contact Us Now
Copyright © Kingmach Measurement & Monitoring Technology Co., Ltd.
get a quote
Your Name:
E-mail:*
Company:
Phone/WhatsApp:
Content: