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magnetostrictive linear displacement transducer

Kingmach magnetostrictive linear displacement transducer include the JMDL-21XXAT Smart General-Purpose Displacement Meter, a compact instrument for relative displacement and expansion joint movement. The product is used in buildings, railways, transportation works, hydropower structures, dams, and bridge projects where two structural components may move against one another. Listed ranges include 50 mm and 100 mm, with 0.01 mm resolution and 0.5%FS accuracy. The meter is based on inductive frequency modulation, which supports high sensitivity, stable long-term observation, and low temperature influence. A built-in memory chip stores sensor model, serial number, calibration coefficient, time, temperature data for temperature versions, absolute displacement, relative displacement, and zero-point value. It can save 800 measurement results, which is useful when checking site history after construction stages or weather events. When connected to an integrated tester or automatic acquisition system, readings can be reviewed quickly without relying on manual gauge notes. During project setup, the measuring point should be matched with the expected travel direction, available mounting space, cable route, and required acquisition interval. This prevents a short-range joint instrument from being used on a long-travel point, or an exposed sensor from being placed where an embedded anchor is needed. It also helps the monitoring team set a baseline that can be defended during acceptance and later maintenance review.

Application of  magnetostrictive linear displacement transducer

Application of magnetostrictive linear displacement transducer

In building and high-formwork construction, magnetostrictive linear displacement transducer are used less like long-term bridge instruments and more like real-time construction controls. During concrete pouring, steel pipe supports, scaffold frames, formwork platforms, and temporary load paths can move quickly while workers and pumps are still operating. Kingmach JMDL-49XXAT formwork displacement meters are built for this kind of site, with 50 mm, 100 mm, and 200 mm ranges, 0.01 mm sensitivity, 0.5%FS accuracy, IP68 protection, and a listed temperature range from -40 degrees Celsius to +100 degrees Celsius. Built-in memory can store time, temperature, displacement values, and other records. On a high-formwork job, the sensor position should be tied to the pouring sequence, support layout, concrete volume, and warning action. A sudden lateral movement of a steel pipe has a different meaning from slow settlement after loading. JMDL-22XXAT crack gauges may also be used after construction to follow building joint or crack width changes. The practical value is fast site feedback while the work can still be adjusted. Site teams should define who receives alarms during pouring, how readings are confirmed, and when work should pause for inspection. This makes the displacement point part of the construction control process, not just a record reviewed after the risk has passed.

The future of magnetostrictive linear displacement transducer

The future of magnetostrictive linear displacement transducer

Future magnetostrictive linear displacement transducer will likely place more intelligence at the edge of the monitoring network. Instead of sending every reading to a platform without review, acquisition units can check whether a displacement jump is physically plausible, whether the temperature moved at the same time, and whether nearby channels changed in the same direction. Kingmach smart products already store measurement time, temperature for temperature versions, absolute displacement, relative displacement, and zero-point values on selected models. That local record can support early filtering and field diagnosis. For remote slopes, dams, subgrades, and tunnel portals, this matters because network access may be unstable and maintenance visits may be expensive. Edge checks can flag cable damage, zero drift, sudden water ingress, or installation movement before the data is accepted as structural deformation. The strongest systems will still depend on careful installation, because digital tools cannot correct a loose bracket, wrong range, or poorly recorded baseline. Clear reporting will make displacement monitoring more useful for non-specialist decision makers while preserving the detail engineers need.

Care & Maintenance of magnetostrictive linear displacement transducer

Care & Maintenance of magnetostrictive linear displacement transducer

For long-term magnetostrictive linear displacement transducer, maintenance should focus on trend credibility rather than only sensor survival. Review baseline drift, sudden jumps, flat lines, missing data, temperature influence, and disagreement between nearby points. A flat line may mean no movement, but it may also mean a stuck cable, broken rod, frozen channel, or communication failure. A sudden jump may be real deformation, but it may also follow bracket impact, cabinet work, lightning, or power cycling. Kingmach products with stored measurement records, calibration coefficients, zero values, and digital communication help with diagnosis, but field notes remain important. Inspect waterproof seals, cable glands, brackets, anchor heads, cabinets, grounding, and channel labels at planned intervals. Keep displacement data linked with photos, inspection comments, rainfall, water level, construction events, and nearby sensor readings so engineers can trust the long-term movement history. Keep the installation photo, point number, zero value, and expected movement direction with the commissioning record for later review. If a reading changes after maintenance work, inspect the base, anchor, cable, and cabinet before assuming the structure itself has moved.

Kingmach magnetostrictive linear displacement transducer

magnetostrictive linear displacement transducer are especially useful when the movement path is known but the rate and timing are uncertain. Kingmach's differential displacement meter uses two coupled inductive coils so equal and opposite magnetic flux changes can reduce environmental interference and thermal drift. The magnetostrictive JMCW-21XXADT provides non-contact absolute displacement measurement over 0 to 1000 mm, with 0.01 mm resolution, plus RS485 communication and IP67 protection. The wire rope JMLS-22XXADT converts cable extension into digital data for long or curved movement paths. These different mechanisms let designers match the sensor to the physical path instead of forcing one format into every project. A short expansion joint, a hydraulic cylinder, a landslide monitoring line, and a tunnel clearance point may all be called displacement, but each one needs its own mounting, range, and data plan. The point should be named on the drawing, linked with its cable route, and checked against the expected movement direction before the first automatic reading is accepted. For daily review, the reading should be compared with nearby points, recent weather, site operations, and any loading event that could explain the movement.

FAQ

  • Q: Which magnetostrictive linear displacement transducer are used for rock layers or bedrock?
    A: JMDL-31XXAT multipoint meters are used for different surrounding rock layers, while JMDL-32XXAT single-point bedrock meters are used for tunnel rock mass, dam bedrock, slope, or foundation pit movement.

    Q: How many points can the multipoint meter support?
    A: The multipoint installation kit supports three to five monitoring points, with anchor heads fixed at different depths by drilling and grouting.

    Q: What ranges are listed for these models?
    A: Both JMDL-31XXAT and JMDL-32XXAT list 50 mm, 100 mm, and 200 mm models with 0.01 mm resolution.

    Q: Why monitor several depths?
    A: Different layers may move differently. Separating shallow and deep movement helps engineers judge whether the problem is surface creep, deeper rock slip, or overall mass movement.

    Q: What records should be kept?
    A: Keep drilling depth, anchor location, grouting date, channel name, zero value, cable route, and first stable reading.

Reviews

Michael Anderson

The strain gauges and load cells are extremely accurate and stable. They performed very well in our bridge monitoring project. Highly recommended!

Christopher Martinez

Very satisfied with the readouts & data loggers. User-friendly interface and supports multiple sensor inputs.

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