Turbulence often shows up in fluid manometers in the form of bouncing fluid. With a manometer scale designed for .8xx SG fluid I would think it would show easier than a scale for heavier 1.xx fluids [blue / violet]. Naturally the intensity of the turbulence would be reflected in the amount of bounce.Chad Speier wrote:I say it has something to do with turbulence with the delta p across the square edge plate. Not to mention it's just past the curtain area and your working off the port area which means a difference in pressure.
With my original manometers and without a baffle plate in my MSD bench cabinet. I ended up using distilled fluid and the green wetting fluid for a 1.0 SG and I saw turbulence very plainly on the inclined. It happened with every head I tested above 90% on the scale.
Another issue was the foolish location of the test pressure pickup. They wanted it mounted in the test fixture cylinder.... Worst spot you could ever put one. Move it in or out a little...whatch your test pressure change... I cured all of those issues.
So let's consider the differences in reactions between a fluid manometer vs an electronic setup. This where I expect Bruce to jump in with both feet with all of his electronic calibration experience he's gained over the past few years.
The electronic units use sampling and averaging to arrive at a displayed number. From discussions with Bruce, it's an eye opening experience. One could conclude that to some degree, turbulence effects could be tuned to a lesser degree than they present in reality with an electronic manometer. Don't hold my feet to the fire on that. It's logical speculation on my part.
I will say that as is, I can see turbulence effects taking place when they do. At least I think so because of the way the digital numbers either hold or don't hold steady. Some of that could be because my manual flow control valves are 6" in diameter. Quite touchy sometimes.
The point is when a turbulence problem is suspected to be causing possible read errors with consideration of that fact that we are comparing benches with orifice and cabinet design differences, how much does it affect a particular type of manometer's ability to reflect that situation accurately ?
I'm not picking on DM's or Analog guages. I'm promoting a discussion to lead to a solution....
One more thing. Unless testing is duplicated with the same stand and exact same positioning of the head on that stand, the results can be discarded immediately when we're splitting hairs over 1-2% in 200CFM or greater flow ranges.
I sure wish Tom Vaught would surface with some input There's a walking library of experience who's input would be valuable...
FWIW, the SF600 hasn't been proven to be anything other than "accepted" and other than the assumed quality behind the brand label, I can't think of a reason it should be. Especially when I've seen huge variances between those benches. So for all of those who subscribe to the "tell them what they want to hear to make a buck" line of thinking...put that in your pipe and smoke it
Might be a lot wiser to haul out Darin's criteria list of what makes a good head....CFM is what? 5th...6th on the list.... OOOOOO I just had to throw that in there.....
Larry C