Murec
Mechanical
- Aug 2, 2006
- 74
I am working on a floating suction system in a large tank.
Three articulated suction arms, made of 24" pipe, will be suspended from floats so the intakes are about 1m below the surface. The problem is to monitor the position of the suction pipes. The pipes should rise and lower with the liquid level in the tank, but they can also get stuck high or sink to the bottom.
One solution is to attach cables to the pipes and check the length of the cables. This requires pulleys, tesioning springs and other hardware.
Another solution, with (almost) no moving parts is a guided wave radar, with the cable threaded through a target disc attached to the pipe (one instrument for each pipe). Here the problem is to detect the disc itself and not the surface of the liquid.
Does anyone have any experience in similar applications?
Thank you
Three articulated suction arms, made of 24" pipe, will be suspended from floats so the intakes are about 1m below the surface. The problem is to monitor the position of the suction pipes. The pipes should rise and lower with the liquid level in the tank, but they can also get stuck high or sink to the bottom.
One solution is to attach cables to the pipes and check the length of the cables. This requires pulleys, tesioning springs and other hardware.
Another solution, with (almost) no moving parts is a guided wave radar, with the cable threaded through a target disc attached to the pipe (one instrument for each pipe). Here the problem is to detect the disc itself and not the surface of the liquid.
Does anyone have any experience in similar applications?
Thank you