I work in pharmaceutical piping mostly. The Flow meters that I've used
have a requirement for 3-6 OD's length of pipe upstream of the
instrument. What this does is get a more laminar flow out of the
product which provides better accuracy in measurement.
Regards,
Aaron Wolfe
Piping Designer
Paul Mueller Company
P.O. Box 828
Springfield, Mo 65801
(417) 575-9780
E-mail: <a href="/group/PipingDesign/post?postID=OJWkOP8ZSQJqIyN9_BnCX4mF7AiRT0QCAyNeJJ_F8viuH2Vgl1DD1-ty8N01rLoMfdg0Ev5lQ_sDkA">awolfe@muel.com</a>
-----Original Message-----
From: Paul Bowers [mailto:pbowers@pipingdesign.com]
Sent: Wednesday, October 29, 2003 8:42 PM
To: <a href="/group/PipingDesign/post?postID=vjQ9oNsl5mtJpdD7QuODrl2Tt5cndlnpdLg0VT8LxuAZ4yHWbRTgCJV_KeE-BCJXqr3EEzvD-Quj9GqaDByXRb17SqtsTA">PipingDesign@yahoogroups.com</a>
Subject: [PipingDesign] Straight runs for flowmeters
Perhaps some of our instrumentation/flow specialists could throw some
light
on the concept of minimum upstream/downstream piping for flowmeters.
I think we've discussed this before (search 5708 previous PipingDesign
Group
messages at http://groups.yahoo.com/group/PipingDesign/messages) but
it's
always worth a recap.
Paul
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Received on Thu Oct 30 08:50:00 2003
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