GB2101219A - Rotary fluid-flow meter - Google Patents

Rotary fluid-flow meter Download PDF

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Publication number
GB2101219A
GB2101219A GB08120923A GB8120923A GB2101219A GB 2101219 A GB2101219 A GB 2101219A GB 08120923 A GB08120923 A GB 08120923A GB 8120923 A GB8120923 A GB 8120923A GB 2101219 A GB2101219 A GB 2101219A
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GB
United Kingdom
Prior art keywords
meter
rotor
cavity
flow
counter
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Granted
Application number
GB08120923A
Other versions
GB2101219B (en
Inventor
Robert William Francis Ward
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Breckland Meters Ltd
Original Assignee
Breckland Meters Ltd
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Breckland Meters Ltd filed Critical Breckland Meters Ltd
Priority to GB08120923A priority Critical patent/GB2101219B/en
Publication of GB2101219A publication Critical patent/GB2101219A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of GB2101219B publication Critical patent/GB2101219B/en
Expired legal-status Critical Current

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Classifications

    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01FMEASURING VOLUME, VOLUME FLOW, MASS FLOW OR LIQUID LEVEL; METERING BY VOLUME
    • G01F3/00Measuring the volume flow of fluids or fluent solid material wherein the fluid passes through the meter in successive and more or less isolated quantities, the meter being driven by the flow
    • G01F3/02Measuring the volume flow of fluids or fluent solid material wherein the fluid passes through the meter in successive and more or less isolated quantities, the meter being driven by the flow with measuring chambers which expand or contract during measurement
    • G01F3/04Measuring the volume flow of fluids or fluent solid material wherein the fluid passes through the meter in successive and more or less isolated quantities, the meter being driven by the flow with measuring chambers which expand or contract during measurement having rigid movable walls
    • G01F3/06Measuring the volume flow of fluids or fluent solid material wherein the fluid passes through the meter in successive and more or less isolated quantities, the meter being driven by the flow with measuring chambers which expand or contract during measurement having rigid movable walls comprising members rotating in a fluid-tight or substantially fluid-tight manner in a housing
    • G01F3/10Geared or lobed impeller meters
    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01FMEASURING VOLUME, VOLUME FLOW, MASS FLOW OR LIQUID LEVEL; METERING BY VOLUME
    • G01F15/00Details of, or accessories for, apparatus of groups G01F1/00 - G01F13/00 insofar as such details or appliances are not adapted to particular types of such apparatus
    • G01F15/06Indicating or recording devices
    • G01F15/061Indicating or recording devices for remote indication
    • G01F15/063Indicating or recording devices for remote indication using electrical means

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  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Fluid Mechanics (AREA)
  • General Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Measuring Volume Flow (AREA)

Abstract

The meter comprises a cavity 10, a fluid inlet (37), Fig. 3 (not shown), to the cavity and a fluid outlet (38) from the cavity, and a rotor(s) e.g. two oval rotors (39 and 40), mounted within the cavity between the inlet and the outlet. The rotor(s) is (are) provided (not shown). An electrical inductor(s) 20 and 66, which is (are) capable of detecting movement of the magnet(s) is (are) arranged outside the cavity so as to monitor rotation of the rotor(s). The magnet(s) may be replace with other means whose movement can be detected by an external means other than an electrical inductor. <IMAGE>

Description

SPECIFICATION Fluid flow meter This invention relates to a fluid flow meter, especially a liquid flow meter which is suitable for domestic application by the various national water authorities.
The advances in the usage, recycling and control of water in recent years reflect the need for control of water as a limited commodity caused by the continuing increases in population coupled with increased demands by agriculture and industry. This need is also made evident by political pressure sponsored by public demand for the cost effectiveness of continued support of the water services by public money. These trends may well lead to the sale or lease of water based on measured usage.
Future policies may well be dictated by the attention currently being focussed on energy conservation that could open up a completeiy new area in the utilisation of a pressurised water supply as a source of energy to enhance or replace electrical domestic equipment. The availability of cold water detergent may herald the design of a washing machine powered and programmed by water. Again, the desirability of metered water is highlighted.
Such arguments that have been put forward hitherto for the adoption of domestic meters have been, and are being, parried by statements of cost. For example, 80 per installation has recently been quoted, which is formidable even with individual, or government, underwritten expense. These estimates are based on currently available meters which are invariably manufactured from metals using a large number of machined mechanical parts.
One previously-proposed meter adopts the well proven principle of displaced volume effected by two oval rotors in a cavity of known volume.
The rotors rotate in opposite senses and are at 900 to one another when one is at right angles to the direction of flow. A meter which uses this principle is known as a rotating oval flow meter.
Such a flow meter is driven by the flow of water or other fluid passing through it, the speed of rotation of the rotors being in direct proportion to the amount of water displaced. Hitherto, the measurement of flow has been achieved as indicated diagrammatically in Figure 1 of the accompanying drawings, by means of a drive 1 from one of the rotors (not shown in Figure 1) through a sealed bearing in a wall 2 of the cavity 2 to a gear train in a gear box 3 arranged to actuate a mechanical counter 4 set in a display window (not shown in Figure 1) via a counter-togear-train coupling 5.
The foregoing meter tends to exhibit one or more of the following drawbacks: a) rotor bearing wear resulting in seizure and flow restriction, because of the kind of bearing needed for coupling one of the rotors to the gear train; b) breakdown of the seal on the drive shaft between the cavity and a housing for the gearbox and/or display; c) use of metals in the construction which may either have an adverse effect on the water or may be adversely affected by the water to the detriment of the rotors and bearings; d) limitation on the selection of metals which can be used without incurring detrimental electrolytic effects; e) the need for a large number of machined parts resulting in high manufacturing costs; f) the need for a large number of moving parts which reduce the "Mean Time between Failure" factor, thus reducing reliability;; g) no facilities for calibration by adjusting the ratio between rotor turns and turns of the counter, this being an inherent factor of design although the accuracy of the meter is directly proportional to the allowed manufacturing tolerances.
The present invention aims to provide a flow meter which is less susceptible to one or more of these drawbacks. One way it accomplishes this is to replace the mechanical linkage between one of the rotors of the meter and the counter by a magnet or other detectable device in or on one of the rotors and an electrical inductor or other detector outside the cavity.
Thus, according to one aspect of the present invention, there is provided a flow meter comprising a cavity, an inlet to the cavity and an outlet from the cavity, and a rotor mounted within the cavity between the inlet and outlet, the rate of rotation of which rotor is proportional to the flow of fluid through the meter, in which the rotor is provided with a magnet or other detectable device, and an electrical inductor or other detector, which is capable of detecting the detectable device, is arranged outside the cavity to monitor rotation of the rotor without being mechanically linked thereto. The cavity may therefore be completely sealed with no linkage member extending through its wall or walls.
The rotor may be one of two oval rotors mounted in the cavity for rotation about axes which are transverse in relation to fluid flow through the meter, in opposite senses and at 900 to one another when one of them is at right angles to the direction of flow.
Another way in which this invention accomplishes its aim is by making the cavity wall or walls, the rotor or rotors, and/or the rotor shaft or shafts and bearings out of synthetic plastics material or materials.
For example, the cavity wall or walls and a case and bulkhead of the meter may be injection moulded as one part in polypropylene or a similar material. The meter may have rotor shafts injection moulded in nylon, and rotor ovals moulded in polypropylene with encapsulated sinterred magnets.
An example of a flow meter in accordance with the present invention is illustrated in Figures 2 to 11 of the accompanying drawings, in which: Figure 2 is a diagram showing the basic layout of the flow meter; Figure 3 is a rear view of the meter with a rear plate and gear wheels of rotors of the meter removed for the sake of clarity; Figure 4 shows the arrangement of two rotors of the meter in greater detail; Figure 5 shows a rear end cap of the meter; Figure 6 an axial sectional view through the flow meter; Figure 7 shows an axial sectional view of one of the rotors of the flow meter, a section at right being shown by the broken lines; Figure 8 shows a rear view of the flow meter; Figure 9 shows a front view of the flow meter; Figure 10 shows a side view of the flow meter; and Figure 11 is a block circuit diagram of the electronic circuitry of the meter.
The flow meter shown diagrammatically in Figure 2 comprises a meter cavity 10 with a bulkhead 12 as one of the cavity walls dividing the cavity 10 from an electronic components and counter housing 14. A liquid crystal display counter 1 6 connected to a printed circuit board 18 is mounted within the housing 14. A number of electrical and electronic components are attached to the printed circuit board 18, including an electrical inductor or pick-up coil 20, field effect transistors 22 and other semi-conductor or electronic components 24 connected to perform the functions which are described herein.
The construction of the flow meter is shown in greater detail in Figures 3 to 10 of the accompanying drawings.
A polypropylene cavity and housing wall 26 of the meter is oblong in a section perpendicular to a central axis through the meter, as shown in Figure 3. This section comprises two semi-circular portions 28 spaced apart by two straight parallel portions 30. A bulkhead 32 divides the spaced within the wall 26 into the meter cavity 10 and the electronic components and counter housing 14. The bulkhead 32 and cavity and housing wall 26 are injection moulded as one part. A rear end cap 34 shown in Figure 5 closes off the meter cavity 10 from the exterior, and a front plate 35 closes off the housing 14. The front plate 35 has a display window 36 shown in Figure 9, to reveal the liquid crystal display counter 16. The cavity 10 is provided with an inlet 37 and an outlet 38 provided respectively in the opposite straight portions 30 of the wall 26.
The polypropylene rotors 39 and 40 are mounted within the casing 10 so as to be rotatable about their respective shafts 42 and 44.
These axes lie in the planes in which the semicircular portions 28 of the cavity wall 26 meet the straight portions 30. The rotors are the same size as one another, both being oval in transverse section. The major axis of each oval is equal to the interior radius of each semi-circular portion 28, and the sum of the major axis and the minor axis is equal to the distance between the shafts 42 and 44. The geometry of the oval shape is such that, starting from positions in which the major axis of one oval is parallel to the straight portions 30 of the cavity and housing wall 26 and the major axis of the other oval is at right angles to those straight portions, the ovals always touch one another along a line parallel to and between the shafts 42 and 44 for equal rotations of the two rotors in opposite senses.
Figure 4 shows respective intermeshing gear wheels 46 and 48 fixed to the rear sides of the rotors 39 and 40 to ensure that the two rotors always rotate in opposite senses to one another by the same angular amount. The gear wheels may each be made with the corresponding rotor as one part. Respective sintered magnets 50 and 52 are encapsulated in the rotors 39 and 40 close to an outer extremity of the major axis in each case, with weights 54 and 56 counterbalancing the magnets close to the opposite extremities of the major axes.
Figure 6 shows how the various parts of the meter are assembled together with injection moulded 600 nylon pin bearings 58, 60, 62 and 64 at the ends of the shafts 42 and 44, one bearing 58 or 60 for each shaft being sunk in the bulkhead 32 and another 62 or 64 in the rear cap 34.
On one side of the bulkhead 32, in the electronic component and counter housing 14, the printed circuit board 1 8 is mounted in the bulkhead, with the pick-up coil 20, field-effect transistors 22 and other electronic components 24, and also the liquid crystal display counter 16.
The pick-up coil 20 is accommodated in a recess in the bulkhead 32 on the dry side thereof. a further recess, diametrically opposite the first, houses a second pick-up coil 66 connected to charge an integral nickel-cadmium cell 68 via a rectifier (not shown in Figure 6). The cell is connected to power the various electronic components on the printed circuit board 18, including the liquid crystal display counter 1 6.
Operation of the flow meter is as follows.
As water under pressure enters the meter cavity 10 via the inlet 37, it drives the rotors 39 and 40 in opposite senses as indicated by the arrows in Figure 3 to move around the inside of the semi-circular portions 28 of the cavity wall 26 before passing to the opposite side of the rotors and out of the cavity 10 via the outlet 38. Since the amount of water transferred in this from the inlet to the outlet is substantially the same for each full turn of the rotors 39 and 40, the flow of water through the meter is directly proportional to the speed of rotation of the rotors, or expressing this in another way, the total volume of water displaced is proportional to the total number of turns of the rotors. The gear wheels 46 and 48 or the rotors 39 and 40 respectively ensure that the rotors always turn through the same angles, albeit in opposite directions, over any given period of time. This ensures that the ovals are always touching one another along a line which is parallel to and between the shafts 42 and 44.
The number of times the rotors rotate over any given period of time is counted by means of the scintered magnet 50 in the rotor 39 which creates an electrical pulse in the pickup coil 20 each time it passes by the latter. The coil 20 is thus able to detect the magnet 50. The pulses from the coil 20 are counted electronically and the stored total is displayed by means of the liquid crystal display counter 1 6 on the printed circuit board 1 8. The display thus gives a reading of the total volume of water which has passed through the meter since the counter 1 6 was last set to zero. The counter 1 6 is calibrated so that the reading on the display shows this volume in cubic metres.
The pulsed output from the other pick-up coil 66, created as the sintered magnet 52 in the rotor 40 passes by the coil, maintains a charge level in the nickel-cadmium cell 68. In addition to acting as a power source for the various electronic parts of the meter, the cell 68 maintains the stored total in the counter 1 6 during long periods of nonuse.
This construction of the meter, with its reduced number of moving parts and self-powering features which eliminate the need for a driveshaft and gear train, retains the benefits of the previous meter while offering enhanced performance and reliability. It has the advantage of being capable of mass production by methods which cut out skilled assembly. The net result is a product that can now be produced at a fraction of the-cost of equivalent existing models.
Figure 11 shows electronic circuitry which may be used in the meter. The first pick-up coil is connected to an electronic counter 70 of the liquid crystal display counter 1 6 of Figures 2 to 10. This counter 70 drives a liquid crystal display 72, and is also readable, via a telephone interface 74, by means of the user's telephone line. This allows the meter to be read directly by a central computer. The second pick-up coil 66 has a first output line to a rectifier 76 which charges the nickel-cadmium cell 68, and a second output line to a frequency/voltage converter 78. The cell 68 is connected to apply an operating voltage to the various parts of the circuitry. The frequency/ voltage converter 78 is connected to apply a control voltage to a division ratio adjuster 80.The latter supplies a control signal to the counter 70 to adjust the division ratio of the latter. This calibrates the rate of count according to the flow rate through the meter, correcting for errors which would otherwise tend to arise for rates of flow at the upper and lower extremes of the meter's range.
Instead of using the frequency/voltage connector 78 to control the division ratio adjuster 80, the latter could be controlled directly by the frequency of the signal from the pick-up coil 66. It is also possible to use some other form of cell in place of the nickel-cadmium cell, and some other form of pick-up in place of the pick-up coils.
Claims (Filed 4/6/82).
1. A flow meter comprising a cavity, an inlet to the cavity and an outlet from the cavity, and a rotor mounted within the cavity between the inlet and outlet, the rate of rotation of which rotor is substantially proportional to the flow of fluid through the meter, in which the rotor is provided with a magnet or other detectable means, and an electrical inductor or other detector, which is capable of detecting the detectable means, is arranged outside the cavity to monitor rotation of the rotor without being mechanically linked thereto.
2. A flow meter according to claim 1, in which the rotor is one of two oval rotors mounted in the cavity for rotation in opposite senses about axes which are transverse in relation to fluid flow through the meter, the major axes of the two oval rotors being at 900 to one another when one them is at right angles to the direction of flow.
3. A flow meter according to claim 2, in which the speed or rotation of each rotor is kept the same as the other by intermeshing parts or portions provided on the two rotors.
4. A flow meter according to any preceding claim, in which the cavity wall or walls, the rotor or rotors, and/or the rotor shaft or shafts and bearings comprise a synthetic plastics material or materials.
5. A flow meter according to claim 4, in which the cavity wall or walls and a case and bulkhead of the meter are injection moulded as one part in polypropylene or other synthetic plastics material.
6. A flow meter according to claim 4 or claim 5, in which the meter has rotor shafts injection moulded in nylon.
7. A flow meter according to any one of claims 4 to 6, in which the rotor ovals are moulded in polypropylene or other synthetic material, at least one of the rotors being provided with an encapsulated sinterred magnet.
8. A flow meter substantially as described herein with reference to Figures 2 to 11 of the accompanying drawings.
**WARNING** end of DESC field may overlap start of CLMS **.

Claims (8)

**WARNING** start of CLMS field may overlap end of DESC **. creates an electrical pulse in the pickup coil 20 each time it passes by the latter. The coil 20 is thus able to detect the magnet 50. The pulses from the coil 20 are counted electronically and the stored total is displayed by means of the liquid crystal display counter 1 6 on the printed circuit board 1 8. The display thus gives a reading of the total volume of water which has passed through the meter since the counter 1 6 was last set to zero. The counter 1 6 is calibrated so that the reading on the display shows this volume in cubic metres. The pulsed output from the other pick-up coil 66, created as the sintered magnet 52 in the rotor 40 passes by the coil, maintains a charge level in the nickel-cadmium cell 68. In addition to acting as a power source for the various electronic parts of the meter, the cell 68 maintains the stored total in the counter 1 6 during long periods of nonuse. This construction of the meter, with its reduced number of moving parts and self-powering features which eliminate the need for a driveshaft and gear train, retains the benefits of the previous meter while offering enhanced performance and reliability. It has the advantage of being capable of mass production by methods which cut out skilled assembly. The net result is a product that can now be produced at a fraction of the-cost of equivalent existing models. Figure 11 shows electronic circuitry which may be used in the meter. The first pick-up coil is connected to an electronic counter 70 of the liquid crystal display counter 1 6 of Figures 2 to 10. This counter 70 drives a liquid crystal display 72, and is also readable, via a telephone interface 74, by means of the user's telephone line. This allows the meter to be read directly by a central computer. The second pick-up coil 66 has a first output line to a rectifier 76 which charges the nickel-cadmium cell 68, and a second output line to a frequency/voltage converter 78. The cell 68 is connected to apply an operating voltage to the various parts of the circuitry. The frequency/ voltage converter 78 is connected to apply a control voltage to a division ratio adjuster 80.The latter supplies a control signal to the counter 70 to adjust the division ratio of the latter. This calibrates the rate of count according to the flow rate through the meter, correcting for errors which would otherwise tend to arise for rates of flow at the upper and lower extremes of the meter's range. Instead of using the frequency/voltage connector 78 to control the division ratio adjuster 80, the latter could be controlled directly by the frequency of the signal from the pick-up coil 66. It is also possible to use some other form of cell in place of the nickel-cadmium cell, and some other form of pick-up in place of the pick-up coils. Claims (Filed 4/6/82).
1. A flow meter comprising a cavity, an inlet to the cavity and an outlet from the cavity, and a rotor mounted within the cavity between the inlet and outlet, the rate of rotation of which rotor is substantially proportional to the flow of fluid through the meter, in which the rotor is provided with a magnet or other detectable means, and an electrical inductor or other detector, which is capable of detecting the detectable means, is arranged outside the cavity to monitor rotation of the rotor without being mechanically linked thereto.
2. A flow meter according to claim 1, in which the rotor is one of two oval rotors mounted in the cavity for rotation in opposite senses about axes which are transverse in relation to fluid flow through the meter, the major axes of the two oval rotors being at 900 to one another when one them is at right angles to the direction of flow.
3. A flow meter according to claim 2, in which the speed or rotation of each rotor is kept the same as the other by intermeshing parts or portions provided on the two rotors.
4. A flow meter according to any preceding claim, in which the cavity wall or walls, the rotor or rotors, and/or the rotor shaft or shafts and bearings comprise a synthetic plastics material or materials.
5. A flow meter according to claim 4, in which the cavity wall or walls and a case and bulkhead of the meter are injection moulded as one part in polypropylene or other synthetic plastics material.
6. A flow meter according to claim 4 or claim 5, in which the meter has rotor shafts injection moulded in nylon.
7. A flow meter according to any one of claims 4 to 6, in which the rotor ovals are moulded in polypropylene or other synthetic material, at least one of the rotors being provided with an encapsulated sinterred magnet.
8. A flow meter substantially as described herein with reference to Figures 2 to 11 of the accompanying drawings.
GB08120923A 1981-07-07 1981-07-07 Rotary fluid flow meter Expired GB2101219B (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB08120923A GB2101219B (en) 1981-07-07 1981-07-07 Rotary fluid flow meter

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB08120923A GB2101219B (en) 1981-07-07 1981-07-07 Rotary fluid flow meter

Publications (2)

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GB2101219A true GB2101219A (en) 1983-01-12
GB2101219B GB2101219B (en) 1984-08-22

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Cited By (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DE4008844A1 (en) * 1989-03-20 1990-09-27 Rolf Moosmann Volumetric counter with oscillating annular piston - has electronic module with lock for each receiver to prevent pulse counting
AU650563B2 (en) * 1991-09-06 1994-06-23 Romteck Pty Ltd Water metering apparatus
EP1211489A2 (en) * 2000-11-29 2002-06-05 Digmesa Ag Rotary piston fluid meter
DE102006054867A1 (en) * 2006-11-20 2008-05-29 Hydrometer Gmbh Meter e.g. flow meter, housing for pipeline, has flexible wall section limiting flow path and provided in body and connecting tubes, where wall section is deformable by fluid pressure and flow path for fluid is formed in housing and tubes
WO2012037619A1 (en) * 2010-09-24 2012-03-29 Fluxx Metrologia E Inovação Ltda. Autonomous volumetric meter for liquid fuels
EP2674732A3 (en) * 2012-06-14 2014-03-26 Bopp & Reuther Messtechnik Gmbh Flow meter for fluids and method for measuring the flow rate of a fluid
DE202017106253U1 (en) * 2017-10-16 2019-01-17 Flaco-Geräte GmbH Oval gear

Cited By (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DE4008844A1 (en) * 1989-03-20 1990-09-27 Rolf Moosmann Volumetric counter with oscillating annular piston - has electronic module with lock for each receiver to prevent pulse counting
AU650563B2 (en) * 1991-09-06 1994-06-23 Romteck Pty Ltd Water metering apparatus
EP1211489A2 (en) * 2000-11-29 2002-06-05 Digmesa Ag Rotary piston fluid meter
EP1211489A3 (en) * 2000-11-29 2003-03-05 Digmesa Ag Rotary piston fluid meter
DE102006054867A1 (en) * 2006-11-20 2008-05-29 Hydrometer Gmbh Meter e.g. flow meter, housing for pipeline, has flexible wall section limiting flow path and provided in body and connecting tubes, where wall section is deformable by fluid pressure and flow path for fluid is formed in housing and tubes
DE102006054867B4 (en) * 2006-11-20 2012-02-16 Hydrometer Gmbh Meter housing of a fluid meter
WO2012037619A1 (en) * 2010-09-24 2012-03-29 Fluxx Metrologia E Inovação Ltda. Autonomous volumetric meter for liquid fuels
EP2674732A3 (en) * 2012-06-14 2014-03-26 Bopp & Reuther Messtechnik Gmbh Flow meter for fluids and method for measuring the flow rate of a fluid
DE202017106253U1 (en) * 2017-10-16 2019-01-17 Flaco-Geräte GmbH Oval gear

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PCNP Patent ceased through non-payment of renewal fee

Effective date: 19950707