I have a 8 Foot water gauge.
Yes that's 48" up and 48" down. Yes i know that =96" of water U-Tube
I installed a U-Tube that uses gauge oil today,(Thanks again Ray!!!) for a comparison of my water gauge.
Both were adj to show "0"
What i found was kinda shocking!
this is at 10"........notice the water gauge (blue fluid) is 1" off each side, or at only 8" of water
At 20"(which is the max reading for the Gauge oil U-Tube) the water is off by almost 4"(actually 3.5")
What's going on here?
The Bigger Your U-Tube water,.....The More Inaccurite?????
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Re: The Bigger Your U-Tube water,.....The More Inaccurite???
Are they "T" together?
Bruce
Who . . . me? I stayed at a Holiday in Express . . .
Who . . . me? I stayed at a Holiday in Express . . .
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Re: The Bigger Your U-Tube water,.....The More Inaccurite???
What's wrong is the scale on the manometer with the red oil, red gauge oil is less dense than water so 1" WC of pressure will move the column on the manometer by 1/(specific gravity of the fluid), the scale needs to stretched out to compensate for the lower density fluid. Based on what you've told us, I'm guessing your gauge oil is the typical 0.826 specific gravity fluid so if your water gauge reads 16.5", the gauge red oil would read 16.5/0.826=19.98"
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Re: The Bigger Your U-Tube water,.....The More Inaccurite???
Here's a somewhat unorthodox way of making a U tube manometer easy to read accurately and without spending a lot of time making a fancy scale, with your 0.826 sp red gauge oil, tilt the whole U-tube over to 37.25°, use a simple yard stick for a scale and read your pressure directly off the yard stick.
BTW, 37.25° is the angle you get when you have a right angle triangle with a rise of 21.79" with a hypotenuse of 36" and 21.79" is the amount of change you see along one leg of a U-tube manometer filled with 0.826 fluid when you apply a pressure of 36" WC.
BTW, 37.25° is the angle you get when you have a right angle triangle with a rise of 21.79" with a hypotenuse of 36" and 21.79" is the amount of change you see along one leg of a U-tube manometer filled with 0.826 fluid when you apply a pressure of 36" WC.
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Re: The Bigger Your U-Tube water,.....The More Inaccurate???
The smaller 20" u-tube manometer shown in Flash's picture is made for Kohler engine service by Dwyer and uses the Dwyer red gage oil. It's not a DIY u-tube manometer.
My Flowbench is better than their's
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Re: The Bigger Your U-Tube water,.....The More Inaccurite???
First off, thanks for all the input!!!!!
To clear up a couple things, ignore my incline to the left, as it its just red food coloring and is not part of my test.
My intentions with this new 20" u-tube was to see how much water varied with temperature compared to a stable fluid(Gauge oil) I was not at all expecting to see this ratio difference.
I was completely shocked at the huge variation.
Bruce yes the 96" and the 20" are tied into the same port on my flow bench.
To clear up a couple things, ignore my incline to the left, as it its just red food coloring and is not part of my test.
My intentions with this new 20" u-tube was to see how much water varied with temperature compared to a stable fluid(Gauge oil) I was not at all expecting to see this ratio difference.
I was completely shocked at the huge variation.
Bruce yes the 96" and the 20" are tied into the same port on my flow bench.
So when you bought this gauge, that was the oil that came with it, right.The smaller 20" u-tube manometer shown in Flash's picture is made for Kohler engine service by Dwyer and uses the Dwyer red gage oil. It's not a DIY u-tube manometer.
Gordon
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Re: The Bigger Your U-Tube water,.....The More Inaccurite???
Yes, I sent you an unopened bottle of the red gage oil that came with the manometer.Flash wrote:So when you bought this gauge, that was the oil that came with it, right.The smaller 20" u-tube manometer shown in Flash's picture is made for Kohler engine service by Dwyer and uses the Dwyer red gage oil. It's not a DIY u-tube manometer.
Ray
My Flowbench is better than their's
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Re: The Bigger Your U-Tube water,.....The More Inaccurite???
So with this U tube using .8XX gauge oil, would that mean that the "one inch" space would be actually .8XX apart? is that how its figured?
Gordon
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Re: The Bigger Your U-Tube water,.....The More Inaccurite???
It should be less than 1", I do not know the exact measurement. I can measure my Dwyer vertical manometer and send that measurement to you.Flash wrote:So with this U tube using .8XX gauge oil, would that mean that the "one inch" space would be actually .8XX apart? is that how its figured?
My Flowbench is better than their's
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Re: The Bigger Your U-Tube water,.....The More Inaccurite???
Because the fluid has a lower specific gravity than water, one inch of fluid movement on the manometer would correspond to 0.826"WC of pressure and, one inch of pressure would show 1/0.826"= 1.121" of movement on the manometer so, if you've making a scale and you want to measure from the zero point along only one leg of the manometer, you'd need to put your "inch" marks half that distance apart or 0.605 inches apart.coulterracn wrote:It should be less than 1", I do not know the exact measurement. I can measure my Dwyer vertical manometer and send that measurement to you.Flash wrote:So with this U tube using .8XX gauge oil, would that mean that the "one inch" space would be actually .8XX apart? is that how its figured?