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settlement gauge

Kingmach settlement gauge include the JMDL-62XXADT inductive frequency-modulated hydrostatic level sensor for projects that need a hydrostatic reference network rather than isolated manual checks. The instrument is arranged with connecting tubes, so each measuring location works against a shared liquid level and a stable reference point. Listed ranges are 50 mm, 100 mm, and 200 mm, with 0.01 mm resolution, 0.5%FS accuracy, RS485 output, DC 9V to 24V supply, power consumption below 0.5W, and an operating temperature from -30 degrees Celsius to +80 degrees Celsius. It is applied in dam deformation observation, bridge deflection, slope stability, building settlement, and high-speed rail foundation monitoring. A good project layout starts with the reference benchmark, tube slope, exhaust position, cabinet height, cable route, and channel address. During commissioning, the crew should remove trapped air, confirm fluid continuity, record the initial level, and compare every channel under the same temperature condition. The data cabinet can then collect each channel by address and preserve a clear relation between tube branch, instrument serial number, and drawing location. This makes later data easier to judge because a curve change can be traced back to a named measuring point, a known hydraulic path, and a documented baseline.

Application of  settlement gauge

Application of settlement gauge

Layered soil, slope, and embankment projects often need settlement gauge that can separate underground compression from groundwater variation. Kingmach JMCJ-1003/1005 magnetic ring settlement water level gauge serves that role through a probe, reel, measuring tape, magnetic rings, and water-level detection. Magnetic rings are placed at selected depths, and the probe gives audible and visual indication when it reaches a ring. Water level is detected by conductivity when the probe contacts water. Published options include 30 m, 50 m, and 100 m depths, plus or minus 1 mm accuracy, a 9V battery, and a probe about 17 cm long with 3 cm diameter. This manual instrument is useful when the engineering question is not just total surface settlement, but which soil layer is compressing. Field crews can compare ring depth, groundwater depth, rainfall, fill placement, cracks, retaining wall movement, and excavation activity. The resulting profile helps identify whether deformation is shallow, deep, water-related, or linked to a particular construction stage.

The future of settlement gauge

The future of settlement gauge

Future settlement gauge will make long-term maintenance analytics more practical. Settlement records are often slow, which means the useful signal may appear over months instead of days. Platforms can compare cumulative settlement, daily rate, seasonal pattern, rainfall, groundwater, traffic loading, filling stage, and excavation history. Kingmach products such as JMYC-62XXAD and JMDL-47XXAT can support this longer view when the baseline and reference point remain stable. Owners will benefit from reports that separate normal consolidation from renewed deformation after new construction, water-level change, or heavy traffic. This is especially important for roadbeds, bridges, buildings, dykes, dams, and reclamation foundations where movement may continue after handover. Future reports should show rate changes, dormant periods, and renewed activity in a way maintenance teams can compare across many assets.

Care & Maintenance of settlement gauge

Care & Maintenance of settlement gauge

Waterproofing and cabinet care matter for settlement gauge because many points work in wet foundations, dams, tunnels, slopes, and outdoor subgrades. Kingmach JMQJ-62XXADT lists IP68 protection, but connectors, cable glands, tubes, and cabinets still need inspection after heavy rain, flooding, dewatering, or washdown. Check for moisture inside junction boxes, loose terminals, damaged jackets, blocked cabinet drainage, and strain on cable entries. If a remote channel drops after a storm, inspect power supply and communication wiring before replacing the instrument. Keep spare seals, glands, connectors, labels, and drying materials available for field crews. Waterproof maintenance should be logged with date, location, weather, observed fault, repair action, and next reading. That record helps distinguish a real settlement change from a wet connector or cabinet fault.

Kingmach settlement gauge

Wide-area settlement monitoring needs settlement gauge that can handle larger travel and uneven profiles. Kingmach JMYC-62XXAD wide-range differential pressure hydrostatic level sensors are designed for pavement settlement, cross-sectional nonlinear settlement, soft foundation treatment, land reclamation foundations, dam subgrades, slope stability, bridge deflection, and building settlement. The listed range extends from 500 mm to 4000 mm, with 0.1 mm resolution and 0.2%FS accuracy. This makes it different from micro range sensors used for smaller deflection changes. A long road or reclamation section should not be judged by one point only. The value comes from comparing a profile over time, then linking that profile with filling stage, surcharge timing, drainage records, groundwater, and site inspection notes. This is especially important when several instruments share one cabinet or when hydrostatic tubes, embedded rods, and manual borehole readings appear in the same project. This is especially important when several instruments share one cabinet or when hydrostatic tubes, embedded rods, and manual borehole readings appear in the same project.

FAQ

  • Q: Which settlement gauge fit hydrostatic leveling?
    A: JMDL-62XXADT, JMQJ-62XXADT, and JMYC-62XXAD are used for hydrostatic or differential pressure settlement monitoring.

    Q: What resolution is available?
    A: JMDL-62XXADT and JMQJ-62XXADT list 0.01 mm resolution, while JMYC-62XXAD lists 0.1 mm resolution for wider ranges.

    Q: Where are micro range hydrostatic sensors used?
    A: They are used for dam settlement, bridge deflection, slope stability, building settlement, tunnel settlement, and subgrade settlement.

    Q: What protection rating is listed for JMQJ-62XXADT?
    A: The product information lists IP68 protection.

    Q: What can damage hydrostatic readings?
    A: Leaking tubes, air pockets, poor reference control, temperature effects, cable faults, and disturbed sensor elevations can all affect the record.

Reviews

Andrew Lee

The visualization software is intuitive and powerful. It helps us analyze monitoring data efficiently.

Joshua Clark

We ordered a full monitoring solution including sensors and data loggers. Everything works seamlessly together. Great supplier!

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