by 84-1074663779 » Sat Jan 24, 2004 5:13 pm
If you are going to build a manometer well, it is also good idea to fit a second well at the top of the manometer. If you have an overpressure accident, and blow some water out of the top of the manometer into the upper well, it then just drains back all by itself.
As far as scale length goes, make it any convenient length, and just tilt the whole thing to give the required rise above zero at the 100% flow calibration point. The scale will always be the same inverse square law, and all the individual points can be worked out on a calculator and simply marked off.
flow = 1.0 (100%) then 1.0 x 1.0 = 1.0 full scale length
flow = 0.99 (99%) then 0.99 x 0.99 = 0.9801 of scale length
flow = 0.98 (98%) then 0.98 x 0.98 = 0.9604 of scale length
flow = 0.90 (90%) then 0.90 x 0.90 = 0.81 of scale length
flow = 0.50 (50%) then 0.50 x 0.50 = 0.25 of scale length
If you decide to make your scale 30" long, the 100% flow calibration line will be at 30", and the 50% flow calibration line will be at 7.5"
If all your flow orifices are sized to give rated flow at say 11.25 inches of water, or something, tilt your 30" long manometer so the 100% flow end is exactly 11.25" higher than zero.
If your orifices are all made to work at 15" pressure, you can tilt the same scale up to 15". The angle of tilt does not need to be known or measured, it is only the length of the scale, and vertical rise that are important.
Hope that helps.