zdas04
Mechanical
- Jun 25, 2002
- 10,274
There has been a recommendation by a quasi-government organization to measure the gas going to pneumatic control devices on wellsites in Oil & Gas operations. They also want to measure fuel gas separately.
The pneumatic control devices would need to measure a flow stream of about 800 SCF/day at less than 30 psig (temperature ranging from 45F to 80F). For sites with multiple devices that number may go as high as 2400 SCF/d. This volume must be electronically available for capture in a SCADA Host System for reporting purposes. Does anyone know of a device that would satisfy these requirements?
The also want to measure the streams that are burned on site (engine fuel, tank heaters, separator heaters, etc.). This stream is probably capped at around 8,000 SCF/d, but it could be as low as 1,000 SCF/d. If there is a device that can handle the first part, does it have the turndown to handle the second?
I've looked at all the devices that I normally use in Field Gas Measurement (i.e., Square Edged Orifice, V-Cone, Vortex, Coriolis, Ultrasonic, etc.) and none of that seems to go down this low. I've looked at Roots Meters and Diaphragm Meters, but I'm having a hard time determining if they have an output that I can take to an RTU (all the diaphragm meters I'm seeing have a local read out).
Thanks for your help.
David Simpson, PE
MuleShoe Engineering
Please see FAQ731-376 for tips on how to make the best use of Eng-Tips Fora.
"It is always a poor idea to ask your Bridge Club for medical advice or a collection of geek engineers for legal advice"
The pneumatic control devices would need to measure a flow stream of about 800 SCF/day at less than 30 psig (temperature ranging from 45F to 80F). For sites with multiple devices that number may go as high as 2400 SCF/d. This volume must be electronically available for capture in a SCADA Host System for reporting purposes. Does anyone know of a device that would satisfy these requirements?
The also want to measure the streams that are burned on site (engine fuel, tank heaters, separator heaters, etc.). This stream is probably capped at around 8,000 SCF/d, but it could be as low as 1,000 SCF/d. If there is a device that can handle the first part, does it have the turndown to handle the second?
I've looked at all the devices that I normally use in Field Gas Measurement (i.e., Square Edged Orifice, V-Cone, Vortex, Coriolis, Ultrasonic, etc.) and none of that seems to go down this low. I've looked at Roots Meters and Diaphragm Meters, but I'm having a hard time determining if they have an output that I can take to an RTU (all the diaphragm meters I'm seeing have a local read out).
Thanks for your help.
David Simpson, PE
MuleShoe Engineering
Please see FAQ731-376 for tips on how to make the best use of Eng-Tips Fora.
"It is always a poor idea to ask your Bridge Club for medical advice or a collection of geek engineers for legal advice"