Home>Products

crack monitoring gauge

Kingmach crack monitoring gauge include the JMDL-31XXAT Smart Multipoint Displacement Meter for tunnels, rock slopes, foundation pits, and surrounding rock layers. This product is not used like a surface joint gauge. It is built for boreholes where movement must be separated by depth. The instrument group includes displacement gauges, PVC measuring rod protective tubes, anchor heads, and multipoint installation kits that support three to five points. During installation, the borehole is prepared, anchor heads are set at selected layers, and grouting fixes each anchor to its target rock or soil zone. Listed models include 50 mm, 100 mm, and 200 mm ranges, all with 0.01 mm resolution. The sensing circuit changes output frequency as the measuring rod moves through the coil, so each channel can report how one anchored layer moves relative to the reference head. This layout is useful when tunnel crown movement, slope slip, or foundation pit deformation may start at one depth before it appears elsewhere. Field records should emphasize borehole number, anchor depth, grout condition, channel order, and the direction of expected movement. During later review, engineers can compare shallow and deep anchors to judge whether the deformation is local relaxation, progressive sliding, or full-section movement. That layered view is the main reason to use a multipoint instrument instead of several unrelated surface gauges.

Application of  crack monitoring gauge

Application of crack monitoring gauge

In crack and joint monitoring, crack monitoring gauge give engineers a direct view of width change rather than a note from visual inspection. This is important for bridges, buildings, tunnel linings, dams, road structures, railway structures, and slope retaining works where a crack may open, close, or move with temperature and load. Kingmach JMDL-22XXAT Smart Crack Gauge is designed for cracks, joints, and expansion joints, with listed 20 mm, 50 mm, 100 mm, and 200 mm ranges. Resolution is 0.01 mm for the 20 mm to 100 mm models and 0.05 mm for the 200 mm model, with 0.5%FS accuracy. Different measuring rods and universal bases allow the instrument to fit varied joint widths and installation angles. Stored model data, serial number, calibration coefficient, and up to 600 measurement records help teams compare early baseline values with later movement after traffic changes, rainfall, repair, vibration, or structural loading. During operation, the monitoring team should keep the baseline, temperature, inspection notes, and nearby sensor behavior in the same review file. This makes it easier to tell whether a movement trend comes from normal service, a repair event, changing load, water influence, or developing structural risk. Clear records also help owners decide when a field inspection is needed instead of waiting for visible damage.

The future of crack monitoring gauge

The future of crack monitoring gauge

Future crack monitoring gauge will also become easier to install in cramped and irregular field locations. Many monitoring points are not clean laboratory setups; they are narrow tunnel headings, wet dam galleries, crowded bridge joints, temporary formwork frames, steep slopes, and machinery spaces with limited room for tools. Smaller housings, clearer mounting accessories, stronger cable exits, and simpler alignment checks will reduce installation errors. Kingmach already uses several physical formats, including crack gauges with measuring rods and bases, draw-wire sensors for longer travel, embedded bedrock assemblies, flexible geogrid meters, and non-contact magnetostrictive meters. Future product development can make these formats more modular, so engineers select the mounting kit, cable protection, connector type, and acquisition method together. That would shorten commissioning time and make later maintenance less dependent on the original installer. For projects with many measurement points, practical installation improvements can be as important as another decimal place of resolution, because a well-mounted sensor gives cleaner data from the beginning.

Care & Maintenance of crack monitoring gauge

Care & Maintenance of crack monitoring gauge

For formwork and construction-stage crack monitoring gauge, inspection frequency should match the work rhythm. Kingmach JMDL-49XXAT formwork displacement meters may be used during concrete pouring, steel pipe support monitoring, tunnel portal movement, slope sliding, dam displacement, or railway subgrade monitoring. The product lists IP68 protection, 0.01 mm sensitivity, 0.5%FS accuracy, and a 30-year service life, but construction sites can still damage connectors, brackets, and cables quickly. Before pouring, confirm the zero reading, bracket tightness, cable route, warning level, and acquisition interval. During pouring or loading, watch for sudden jumps that match pump movement, support adjustment, or worker contact. After the stage is complete, inspect whether the sensor was knocked, buried, or moved. Keep time and temperature records with displacement readings because short-term construction movement can be different from long-term structural deformation. Keep the installation photo, point number, zero value, and expected movement direction with the commissioning record for later review. If a reading changes after maintenance work, inspect the base, anchor, cable, and cabinet before assuming the structure itself has moved.

Kingmach crack monitoring gauge

In structural monitoring, crack monitoring gauge should not be treated as single-purpose accessories. Kingmach displacement products can work with comprehensive testers, automatic acquisition systems, bus modules, RS485 output, and monitoring software, which allows movement data to sit beside strain, load, settlement, tilt, vibration, temperature, and water level. That combined view is important because displacement often has several causes. A tunnel crown reading may respond to excavation sequence, groundwater, lining age, or nearby traffic. A bridge joint may move with both temperature and bearing behavior. A slope reading may change after rainfall, blasting, or retaining wall loading. By using smart products with stored parameters and digital transmission, project teams reduce channel mix-ups and make later data review cleaner. The result is a monitoring chain where field installation, sensor identity, baseline readings, and platform curves can be checked against one another. The point should be named on the drawing, linked with its cable route, and checked against the expected movement direction before the first automatic reading is accepted. For daily review, the reading should be compared with nearby points, recent weather, site operations, and any loading event that could explain the movement.

FAQ

  • Q: Which crack monitoring gauge fit crack monitoring?
    A: The JMDL-22XXAT Smart Crack Gauge is designed for cracks, joints, and expansion joints in bridges, buildings, roads, railways, dams, tunnels, and slopes.

    Q: What ranges does the crack gauge list?
    A: Listed models include 20 mm, 50 mm, 100 mm, and 200 mm ranges, with 0.01 mm resolution on the 20 mm to 100 mm versions and 0.05 mm on the 200 mm version.

    Q: How many records can the crack gauge store?
    A: Product information states that it can save up to 600 measurement results, including time, temperature for temperature versions, displacement values, and zero-point value.

    Q: What installation details matter most?
    A: Base stability, rod alignment, connector sealing, cable protection, and a clear zero reading matter more than a polished-looking installation.

    Q: Can it be used for long-term observation?
    A: Yes. The product is described for long-term monitoring, especially where crack width changes need stable and repeatable measurement.

Reviews

Daniel Brown

Excellent environmental monitoring sensors. The data is consistent, and the system integrates smoothly with our existing setup.

James Thompson

The tiltmeters and accelerometers are very sensitive and provide precise data. Perfect for our structural health monitoring system.

Latest Inquiries

To protect the privacy of our buyers, only public service email domains like Gmail, Yahoo, and MSN will be displayed. Additionally, only a limited portion of the inquiry content will be shown.

Harper***@gmail.comIndia

Dear Sir, we are planning to procure a complete monitoring system including strain gauges, tiltmeter...

Olivia***@gmail.comUnited States

Hello, we are currently sourcing high-precision strain gauges and load cells for a bridge monitoring...

Not finding what you're looking for?
Contact our consultants for more available products.

Request A Quote Now

GET IN TOUCH

If you are interested in our products or want to become our partner.

Please leave your contact information, our team will contact you as soon as possible.

Contact Us Now
Copyright © Kingmach Measurement & Monitoring Technology Co., Ltd.
get a quote
Your Name:
E-mail:*
Company:
Phone/WhatsApp:
Content: