younginstengr
Electrical
- Feb 4, 2007
- 2
Everything I find online or otherwise states that orifice plates have a turndown of 3:1 for 1% uncertainty, 4:1 for 2% uncertainty, and 10:1 for 5-10% uncertainty. The DP transmitters we typically use have a turndown of 40:1.
It seems to me that the turndown of the transmitter itself would be the limiting factor of the flow measurement. Why is the accuracy of orifice flow meters confined to such low turndowns when there are DP instruments capable of much larger turndowns? Is this due to a limitation of the curve produced from the orifice plate itself?
I'm new to the field, and any help would be appreciated.
It seems to me that the turndown of the transmitter itself would be the limiting factor of the flow measurement. Why is the accuracy of orifice flow meters confined to such low turndowns when there are DP instruments capable of much larger turndowns? Is this due to a limitation of the curve produced from the orifice plate itself?
I'm new to the field, and any help would be appreciated.