by Tony » Mon Apr 28, 2008 11:14 pm
Doug, you certainly have a point.
Analog readout, such as a meter with a moving pointer, can be extremely useful where you do not need to know an exact number, only if something is high or low, or perhaps increasing or decreasing. Excellent for something like an engine tachometer in a vehicle, where the pointer is constantly moving all the time. Excellent too for engine water temperature or oil pressure indication, where the exact numbers are not that important.
Now probing a port with a velocity probe is probably a bit like like that. You do not really need to know if the velocity is 300 FPS or 301.7 FPS at a particular place in the port. You just want to probe here and probe there and get a general idea of where it is high, where it is low, and where the flow may be unstable.
So an analog display such as a water manometer may actually be just as good as a digital readout for velocity probing.
But flow measurement is rather different. You need to nail down a hard number that is both as accurate as possible, and highly repeatable. It is no good having a digital display that has a readout resolution of 0.1 CFM, if the accuracy of the reading could be out by a +/- 12 CFM error.
If something reads down to 1 foot per second velocity, or one CFM flow, it should be able to read accurately down to that resolution. That can be a very tall order with a digital display for some particular types of measurement.
For velocity probe measurement a water manometer is probably the most straightforward and reliable. Another low cost solution might be a Magnehelic pressure gauge that reads to around fifty inches of water or two psi. These gauges are ideal in that they have two differential input ports and measure differential pressure, and are reasonably large and easy to read. A replacement home made scale calibrated in feet per second would make for an ultra low cost velocity probe readout. These gauges sometimes sell for as little as $10.00 on e-bay, but you need to make absolutely sure it has a suitable pressure range for the intended application.
I also looked briefly at surplus aircraft airspeed indicators. While the quality would be excellent, the speeds are a bit low for the gauges I have seen, and knots are not a terribly useful measurement unit. Something out of a jet aircraft with a digital match indicator would be fun to play with, but I doubt if it would be within my budget!
Getting back to digital manometers. While building one yourself is certainly feasible, it comes down to why would you want to? These days there are measuring instruments made in China that work pretty well for probably less than you can buy the parts for to build your own.
If you look on e-bay under "digital manometer" there are instruments there for $185 that can be used to measure all sorts of things in many different pressure units, beside flow bench pressures. Fuel pressure, boost pressure, manifold vacuum, exhaust back pressure, differential pressure drops across intercoolers and pipework, mufflers and so on. You get a lot of extra features that would be difficult to add to a home built project.
Some things are just not practical or economic to build yourself at home these days.
Also known as the infamous "Warpspeed" on some other Forums.