fizzle
Mechanical
- Sep 18, 2003
- 3
Hi Guys,
I'm looking for some direction in picking meters to monitor Natural Gas flow and consumption.
I have a number of large box fires operating at max fire rate of 8 million Btus/hr, and am trying to decide on a technology to meter the amount of gas they use in an hour.
I'd like to stay in the realm of Mass Flow, if possible, but cost could make me move to volumetric calculation.
Does anyone have any experience to share with monitoring Natural Gas with Coriolis or Thermal Mass Flowmeters? Thermal Mass meters sounded promising, but I'm told they are subject to large amounts of drift over time.
Ideally, I'd like a meter that requires little maintenance, and is easy to calibrate.
For reference, the pipe size I'm working with is 2" sched. 40, with Natural Gas at 18psi. Turndown is a consideration as well, as my furnaces can go to low fire of around .5 million Btu/hr.
Any experiences/recommendations?
-Matt!
I'm looking for some direction in picking meters to monitor Natural Gas flow and consumption.
I have a number of large box fires operating at max fire rate of 8 million Btus/hr, and am trying to decide on a technology to meter the amount of gas they use in an hour.
I'd like to stay in the realm of Mass Flow, if possible, but cost could make me move to volumetric calculation.
Does anyone have any experience to share with monitoring Natural Gas with Coriolis or Thermal Mass Flowmeters? Thermal Mass meters sounded promising, but I'm told they are subject to large amounts of drift over time.
Ideally, I'd like a meter that requires little maintenance, and is easy to calibrate.
For reference, the pipe size I'm working with is 2" sched. 40, with Natural Gas at 18psi. Turndown is a consideration as well, as my furnaces can go to low fire of around .5 million Btu/hr.
Any experiences/recommendations?
-Matt!