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Pressure Cell

Kingmach Pressure Cell can also include pressure related sensing where soil or structural contact pressure is the main concern. The JMZX-50XXAT/ATM earth pressure cell family is listed in 0.3 MPa, 0.6 MPa, 1 MPa, 2 MPa, 4 MPa, 6 MPa, and 8 MPa ranges, with 0.001 MPa pressure resolution, 0.5%FS pressure accuracy, and ±0.5°C temperature accuracy. The product information also refers to high strength elastic steel, waterproof and durable construction, a 50 year design life, 800 stored measurement sets, and automated acquisition support. For retaining structures, embankments, dams, tunnels, and foundation pits, those pressure records help engineers understand whether earth load, water influence, compaction, or excavation stage changes are affecting the structure. Kingmach's broader monitoring catalog allows these readings to be compared with settlement, water pressure, displacement, and tilt. That connection is important because pressure change without movement may still indicate a developing load redistribution that deserves closer inspection. The same site places these instruments within a wider monitoring range, including piezometers, water level meters, displacement transducers, settlement sensors, tiltmeters, cables, data loggers, and software. That wider range helps when a project needs force data to be compared with movement, water, and temperature records.

Application of  Pressure Cell

Application of Pressure Cell

In slope, embankment, and retaining wall projects, Pressure Cell helps monitor anchor force, slide resistant pile load, earth pressure, and stress change after rainfall or groundwater variation. The practical pain point is that visible slope movement may arrive late, while load and pressure trends may start earlier. Earth pressure cells in the Kingmach range are listed from 0.3 MPa to 8 MPa, with 0.001 MPa resolution, 0.5%FS pressure accuracy, and ±0.5°C temperature accuracy. Hollow load cells for anchor force cover 500 kN to 8000 kN and include temperature correction and waterproof construction. These parameters support long term points in buried, wet, or exposed conditions. Force data should be reviewed with inclinometer, settlement, water level, rainfall, and crack observation records. If anchor force drops while displacement increases, the project team has a different problem than a temporary pressure rise after rain. The instrumentation plan should therefore connect each load point to the ground behavior it is meant to explain. On slopes, cable routes should be protected against rockfall, drainage works, vegetation clearing, and surface runoff. Those mundane details matter because a broken cable can look like a dramatic geotechnical event if the hardware is not inspected first.

The future of Pressure Cell

The future of Pressure Cell

For bridge and cable supported structures, future Pressure Cell work will likely combine high capacity sensing with digital inspection records. Hollow load cells with 500 kN to 8000 kN ranges and long service design can provide long term anchor or cable force data, while acquisition systems can bring those readings into owner platforms. The technical shift is toward trend based assessment: a cable force value is checked against temperature, traffic, wind, maintenance events, and nearby deformation. Wireless transmission may reduce site visits where access is difficult, although high risk points will still need protected cables, stable power, and field verification. As bridge monitoring requirements become more specific about traceability and response workflow, sensors with stored calibration data and temperature correction will be easier to manage. The most useful future system will not simply send alarms. It will show when the change began, which sensor recorded it, what else changed nearby, and whether the reading matches known structural behavior.

Care & Maintenance of Pressure Cell

Care & Maintenance of Pressure Cell

For Pressure Cell used in pile load testing, care begins before the first load step. Confirm that the selected solid load cell range, often between 1000 kN and 10000 kN on Kingmach listed models, exceeds the planned test load with proper margin. Check the 0.1 kN resolution, 0.5%FS precision, calibration certificate, bearing plate flatness, and centering arrangement. During the test, protect the cable from jack movement and keep the readout position safe from vibration and water. Record zero value, temperature, load stage, hold time, unloading stage, and any pause or adjustment. After the test, inspect the sensor for dents, side load marks, connector damage, and cable jacket cuts. Store the calibration coefficient with the test report, not only with the instrument box. If later readings appear inconsistent, compare them with jack pressure, settlement data, and loading procedure before blaming the sensor. Store the report with the test file.

Kingmach Pressure Cell

Pressure Cell often sits between design intent and field behavior. Drawings may state the expected force, but site loading can change when excavation sequence, concrete curing, traffic, reservoir level, grouting, or prestressing work changes. Kingmach supplies sensors and acquisition equipment for bridges, tunnels, dams, subways, slopes, foundations, railways, buildings, and hydropower projects. In these settings, the sensor helps reveal whether a member is carrying its share of the load or taking more than expected. The instrument must fit the force range, the bearing surface, the environmental exposure, and the data workflow. A high capacity sensor with poor installation records is still hard to trust. A moderate range sensor with clear calibration, stable zero, protected cable, and a clean reading plan can produce stronger evidence. For that reason, force monitoring should be planned alongside installation details, not added after the site has already become crowded. This is especially useful when the monitored point becomes hidden after the next work stage.

FAQ

  • Q: What does Pressure Cell do in a foundation pit or tunnel? A: It measures axial force in steel supports, anchor load, or pressure change as excavation and support stages progress. Q: Which Kingmach model fits steel support axial force? A: The JMZX-38XXHAT axial force meter is listed from 200 kN to 3000 kN, with 0.1 kN or 1 kN sensitivity and 0.5%FS accuracy. Q: Is it suitable for wet underground sites? A: The axial force meter lists a 1 MPa waterproof rating, but connector sealing and cable routing still need inspection. Q: Why is direct kN display useful? A: It reduces confusion because teams can read axial force directly instead of converting vibrating wire frequency on site. Q: What should trigger extra checks? A: Excavation step changes, rainfall, dewatering, support adjustment, sudden force jumps, or unstable channels.

Reviews

Michael Anderson

The strain gauges and load cells are extremely accurate and stable. They performed very well in our bridge monitoring project. Highly recommended!

Robert Taylor

The weir flow meter is well-built and delivers accurate measurements. Great value for water management applications.

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