CLAMP-ON FLOW METER by Seztec USA +1 (832) 899-4040
Guide

Why Your Clamp-On Flow Meter Reads Wrong (And Why It Never Tells You)

A clamp-on meter installed in bad hydraulics does not throw an error. It reports a confident, precise, wrong number. Here are the four causes, in the order they actually occur.

Every few months someone calls us to say clamp-on flow meters do not work. They bought one, it read nonsense, and it went in a cupboard.

Almost every time, the instrument was fine.

What makes this failure mode so nasty is that it is silent. A clamp-on meter in a bad location does not flag an error. It does not read zero. It reports a plausible-looking number to four decimal places, and everyone downstream believes it.

1. Straight run — roughly two-thirds of all cases

The meter measures velocity along an acoustic path and infers the mean velocity of the pipe from it. That inference requires a fully developed, symmetric flow profile. An elbow, valve, tee, reducer, or pump destroys it.

You need 10 pipe diameters upstream, 5 downstream, and 30 downstream of a pump. On an 8-inch line, 10D is nearly seven feet.

Pumps get 30 because they impart swirl — the whole body of fluid rotating as it travels — and swirl decays far more slowly than the skew from an elbow.

2. The number you typed in

The instrument computes flow as velocity × area. It does not measure area. It takes it from the pipe dimensions you entered.

A wall thickness off by 10% puts a systematic error into every reading the meter will ever take. And on a thirty-year-old line with scale and corrosion, the drawing is fiction. Measure the wall ultrasonically at the actual mounting location.

3. Couplant

A microscopic film of air between transducer and pipe is, acoustically, a wall. Couplant displaces it. Use more than feels right, and match the grade to the pipe temperature — standard gel bakes out on a hot line and your signal fades over the survey in a way that looks exactly like a real flow change.

4. The pipe was not full

The worst one. The meter multiplies velocity by the full pipe area, so on a half-full gravity line it reports roughly double the real flow. No error. No warning. A number that looks entirely reasonable.

If your pipe is not reliably full, you do not need a clamp-on meter. You need an area velocity meter.

The diagnostic nobody uses

Every decent instrument reports signal strength, gain, and a quality index alongside the flow rate. Look at those before you look at the flow. A reading taken with a pegged gain is not a measurement — it is a number the instrument produced because you asked it to.

Full installation guide →

Tell us the pipe. We will tell you the meter.

Pipe size, material, wall thickness, lining, fluid, and available straight run.

Request a quote