Valve Testing Instruments
When valves leak or fail, it can be extremely costly in terms of
product quality, safety and energy loss. Valve operation effects
the way fluids will flow through a system. There are great
differences in the way particular valves work (for example, control
valve versus safety valve). An Ultraprobe makes it easy to adjust
for these differences and readily determine operating conditions
while valves are on-line.
How Ultrasonic Valve Leak Detection Works
As fluid moves from the high pressure side of a valve through
the seat to the low pressure side, it produces turbulence. This
turbulence generates ultrasound which is detected by the Ultraprobe
and translated, via heterodyning, down into the audible range. The
translated ultrasounds are heard through headphones and seen as
intensity increments, usually decibels on a display panel. High
frequency tuning allows users to adjust for differences in fluid
viscosity (i.e. water vs. steam) and reduce any interference from
stray pipe noises. Ultrasound spectral analysis provides an
"image" of sound to help determine fluid flow
characteristics. Using the time series screen it is possible
to determine low, medium or high flow conditions.
Leak Detection Method
Inspection methods vary depending on the type of valve.
Therefore the primary rule is to know the details of your system,
for example the way a specific valve may work under specific
conditions. For example, is the valve normally open or normally
closed? In order to determine valve condition such as leakage
or blockage: touch two test points upstream of the valve (points A
and B). Reduce the sensitivity (received amplitude) of the
instrument on the first test point until the intensity indicator on
the display panel reads about 50% of scale. If the instrument has
frequency tuning, you may also use this feature to hear the valve
sound quality more clearly. Simply tune the frequency (usually 25
kHz) until the sound you would expect to hear becomes clear. It's
that simple.
Next, touch two test points downstream of the valve (points C
and D) and compare intensity levels. If the sound is louder when
comparing the first downstream (C) with the second upstream test
point(B), the fluid might well be is passing through. If the
compared downstream sound level is low, the valve is closed.
If the second downstream test point (D) is louder than the first
downstream test point(C), this indicates the sound is transferred
from a source further downstream and indicates the valve is not
leaking. Ultrasonic valve inspection is considered a
"positive" test in that an operator can instantly identify sound
quality and intensity differentials and thereby determine operating
condition accurately. Sound analysis can also be used
to indicate the amplitude and movement of fluid between the
upstream and downstream test points.
Valve Testing Instruments
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