J
Jasen Betts
Guest
On 2006-04-26, John_H <john4271@hotmail.com> wrote:
flow switches are available (try a commercial plumbing outlet)
otherwise the can be made... here are two ideas.
stick two stainles steel wire electrodes along opposite sides (of the inside)
of the tubing and put a magnetic field through the gap. (not across)
measure the voltage with a high impedance voltmeter.
may not work well if mounted too close to the pump or if the pump develops
an electrical fault. running the water through a metre or so of metal pipe
(copper/stainless/galv) pipe before the sensor may ba all that's needed,
This one may collect rust particles if they are present in the water and the
flow is too slow.
some boats use a setup like this for their speedometers.
you can use copper wire electrodes to test-drive this one, but stainless
lasts much longer in service.
another option is this, (cross section)
if garbled view in a fixed-pitch font (like courier)
or paste into notepad
| |
| |
| |<--- 19mm pipe with 4x12mm holes
| | drilled near the end
| |
| |
| | .--- pipe joiner
| | /
|XX| |XX|
|XX| |XX|
| | _ | |<-- 40 mm pipe
| \ / \ / |
| / \_/ \ |
$$| |_____| |$$ -- 100 to 1000 turns of magnet wire
$$| |$$
| |
| |
| |
| 00000 |
| 0000000<----- stainless - steel (or brass etc) ball
| 0000000 | a mouse ball may even work
| 0000000 | - they have a metal core
|XX|00000|XX|
|XX| |XX|
| | \
| | `--- pipe joiner
| |
| |
| |<--- 19mm pipe
/|\
|
| ---- flow in this end.
reading this one's a bit harder it needs to be fed high frequency AC (eg
from a 555) the "response of the coil to this signal" of the coil will
change as the ball aproaches pushed by the flow from the pump...
less prone to leaks or electrical interferance, can possibly double
as a check valve, but harder to make.
Bye.
Jasen
Looking for a flow sensor that will detect liquid flow in 19mm plastic
tubing. Don't need to know the flow rate, merely the presence or
absence of flow. Preferably without any significant line restriction.
It's purpose would be to switch a warning device when flow stops so
that a pump can be manually switched off to prevent it working dry.
Flow rate when liquid is present is around 20 litre/minute.
Is any such device commercially available?
flow switches are available (try a commercial plumbing outlet)
otherwise the can be made... here are two ideas.
stick two stainles steel wire electrodes along opposite sides (of the inside)
of the tubing and put a magnetic field through the gap. (not across)
measure the voltage with a high impedance voltmeter.
may not work well if mounted too close to the pump or if the pump develops
an electrical fault. running the water through a metre or so of metal pipe
(copper/stainless/galv) pipe before the sensor may ba all that's needed,
This one may collect rust particles if they are present in the water and the
flow is too slow.
some boats use a setup like this for their speedometers.
you can use copper wire electrodes to test-drive this one, but stainless
lasts much longer in service.
another option is this, (cross section)
if garbled view in a fixed-pitch font (like courier)
or paste into notepad
| |
| |
| |<--- 19mm pipe with 4x12mm holes
| | drilled near the end
| |
| |
| | .--- pipe joiner
| | /
|XX| |XX|
|XX| |XX|
| | _ | |<-- 40 mm pipe
| \ / \ / |
| / \_/ \ |
$$| |_____| |$$ -- 100 to 1000 turns of magnet wire
$$| |$$
| |
| |
| |
| 00000 |
| 0000000<----- stainless - steel (or brass etc) ball
| 0000000 | a mouse ball may even work
| 0000000 | - they have a metal core
|XX|00000|XX|
|XX| |XX|
| | \
| | `--- pipe joiner
| |
| |
| |<--- 19mm pipe
/|\
|
| ---- flow in this end.
reading this one's a bit harder it needs to be fed high frequency AC (eg
from a 555) the "response of the coil to this signal" of the coil will
change as the ball aproaches pushed by the flow from the pump...
less prone to leaks or electrical interferance, can possibly double
as a check valve, but harder to make.
Bye.
Jasen