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General
Description
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Using
4-arm, 350-ohm bonded foil strain
gage bridges, these tough stainless-steel transducers are designed
for safe, accurate, and reliable electrical measurement of gas or fluid
pressure in any number of industrial and research
applications.
Daytronic
provides the following pressure transducers:
Three
Types of Pressure Measurement [Back
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Gage
pressure ("psig") is pressure measured relative to ambient
atmospheric pressure (approximately 14.7 psi). That is, a gage
pressure measurement does not include atmospheric pressure itself.
For
a gage pressure transducer, one side of the pressure-sensing diaphragm
must be vented to the local environment. The transducer will then
indicate a pressure of "zero" when it is not connected to the
process pressure of interest, but while the sensing element is still
exposed to atmospheric pressure.
Gage
pressure is actually a kind of differential pressure. It always
equals the difference between the local absolute pressure and the
local atmospheric pressure.
Absolute
pressure ("psia") does include atmospheric pressure, and
is measured relative to vacuum (0 psi).
For
an absolute pressure transducer, the reference side of the
pressure-sensing diaphragm is isolated from the local environment, being
hermetically sealed in a vacuum. (Absolute pressure sensors are thus
not only isolated from environmental contaminants, but—theoretically—have
better thermal performance than sealed gage units, because there is no
trapped volume of gas to expand and contract with ambient temperature
changes.)
The
transducer will then indicate a pressure of 14.696 pounds per square inch
at sea level, when it is not connected to the process pressure of
interest, but with the sensing element exposed to atmospheric pressure.
Absolute
pressure is always the sum of the local "gage" pressure
(induced by some source) and the atmospheric pressure at the location of
the measurement.
Differential
pressure ("psid") is pressure measured relative to a specific reference
pressure. If the reference pressure is one atmosphere, the
differential pressure equals the gage pressure.
Normally,
a differential pressure transducer will have two pressure ports, and its
pressure reading is generated by subtracting the pressure at the low port
from that at the high port. One port may be "dry" and the
other "wet" (as with the Daytronic 501A
Series), or both may be "wet" (as with the Daytronic 513
Series), or both may be "dry."
Differential
pressure may be either absolute or gage, as long as pressure is being
measured in the same units at both ports.
Pressure
Transducer Applications [Back
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For
many more pressure transducer applications, see the Applications
pages for specific Daytronic instrument families.

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