Related Categories
|
Ashcroft® Inc.Stratford, CT 800-328-8258 No matter what product you need, or what issue you're facing, the experts at Ashcroft® have a solution for you. If you require broader specifications than what their standard product line offer, their engineers, technical staff and product specialists will work with you to custom fit the right product to the job. When it comes to differential pressure transducers, they have everything you need.
Dwyer Instruments, Inc.Michigan City, IN 800-872-9141 As one of the leading manufacturers in the controls and instrumentation industry, Dwyer Instruments continues to grow and serve major markets including, but not limited to HVAC, chemical, food, oil/gas and pollution control. For quality product orders, including differential pressure transducers, call the trusted company today. At Dwyer, they always want to hear from you.
AMETEK® U.S. Gauge, PMT ProductsFeasterville, PA 888-625-5895 From the moment AMETEK U.S. Gauge opened their doors one hundred years ago, the process industries have relied on them for accurate and reliable pressure measurements. For over 30 years at PMT Products, their teams have built on this experience and developed a full line of precision tools, including differential pressure transducers, to match all of their customer's requirements.
Strainsert CompanyWest Conshohocken, PA 610-825-3310 Strainsert Company has been championing the industry with their technical, sales and manufacturing teams for more than four decades. Their goal is to provide the most responsive, accurate and efficient force measurement solutions for a variety of applications. For all needs, including differential pressure transducers, they will come up with the perfect solution for you.
Gems Sensors & ControlsPlainville, CT 800-378-1600 With manufacturing facilities in North America, Europe and Asia, and supports sales, engineering and service offices around the world, Gems Sensors and Controls is prepared to get you the product you have been searching for. With the resources to provide design and manufacturing requirements anywhere, you can be sure to get the exact differential pressure transducers for your next project.
|

Differential Pressure Transducers
Generally, pressure transducers have a cylindrical body with a pipe fitting on one side and a cable coming out of the other. Differential pressure transducers feature additional inputs; these allow differential sensors to measure the difference between two or more pressure inputs in the unit. Stainless steel is used in most differential pressure transducers because of its strength, durability, and resistance to corrosion. Some medical devices may be equipped with differential pressure sensors to help control the flow of fluids; dialysis machines are one example. Differential pressure transducers are used by a wide variety of industries including medical technology development, hydraulic machinery production, aerospace manufacturing and automotive servicing. They are also widely used in factories to monitor machinery.
Differential pressure transducers are called transducers because they are used to convert one kind of energy into another kind of energy. The process of this energy conversion is not unlike the way in which a human hears and understands a sound. When a sound is made, the bones in the human ear respond to the sound and transduce the signal into information that can be processed by the brain. The process of signal transduction for pressure sensors is similar; the signal reaches the sensory receptors of the sensor, which can be piezoelectric plates or other pressure-sensitive materials, and is then transduced in a way that makes the signal comprehensible to humans. There are a few ways in which signals from differential pressure transducers can be interpreted. The simplest way is for the signal to be sent to a dial or gauge that can be quickly and easily be read by a monitoring technician. More complicated are the models that involve data processing computers; such systems are often involved in controlling the equipment they monitor. If, for example, a waste water treatment flow control computer received a signal from a differential pressure transducer about a dangerous build up in water pressure on one side of a valve, the computer system may be able to respond with pressure relief measures. Such systems are sometimes called pressure transmitters. Other similar automatic or semi-automatic pressure control systems are used throughout industry in a variety of applications.![]() |
Image Provided
by Ashcroft Inc. |