rszemeti
Well-Known Member
Entropy would suggest otherwise. Over time, the air will tend to dissolve into the diesel, or otherwise escape ... the general trend is that over time, the pipe will become full of diesel.
my only concern is that we are talking a 1200lt diesel tank (granted it's rarely above 700lt but still a lot of diesel)In the industrial world of level measurement you have a choice of dry leg or wet leg measurement and the option of sensor positioning as in, at the base of the tank or above the tapping point at some easily accessable location. In my experience, mounting the transmitter sensor level with the tapping point for connection for the sensor is by far the most reliable and accurate. Even if this location is less accessable than higher up, the increased reliability will mean you don't need to access it again. Trust me, been there, done it for 50 yrs.
my only concern is that we are talking a 1200lt diesel tank (granted it's rarely above 700lt but still a lot of diesel)
IF something silly happens while I'm away, I'll be pumping all that lot in the sea through the e/r bilge pump which is not nice.
That's the only reason for considering the top sensor approach...
Rgarside,
I think all is correct in the attachment. But the “Head” is the distance h - l.
What we need is the pressure as a function of h, and l varies with pressure.
I am trying to obtain how l varies but it’s a long way and to night it’s too late.
In my sketch, h [head] is the level of liquid in the tank. The results and plot show the air pressure in the tube as a function of the level of liquid in the tank. I have ignored temperature effects, leaks and gas diffusion/absorption. One way to eliminate those concerns is to use the well known Pneumopress approach, where you pump some air down the tube first, so that the level of liquid in it is at its lowest point.
But if, filling the tank, the water level in the tube is allowed to raise - as it will do -, the pressure measured is that at this level, lesser than the correct bottom pressure by the water head from bottom to the level in the tube, l in your sketch.
In your attachment - an Excell leaf I suppose - one can not see calculations. May be the variation of l is already taken into account.
Sandro,
I still don't understand why if you have the sender plugged in at the top of the tube, filling the tank the water level will rise.
Of course if the tube is open, water will rise, but that's not the point imho.
cheers
V.
Imagine doing this:
We dip the open tube in water in the tank. Levels inside and outside the tube are same level. Pressure at the level is atmospheric pressure. (0 bar relative, 1 bar absolute)
We plug the top of the tube with the sender.
We add water in the tank until 1 m higher. The water pressure in tank at the old level outside and inside the tube is now about 0.1 bar relative, that is 1.1 bar absolute).
Inside the tube the water surface is pushed down by the air at 1 bar and is pushed up by the water at 1.1 bar. What can it do but to raise?
It will raise until air pressure (increasing because of the shrinking volume) reaches the value of the water pressure, which will be some less than at the starting level, having a lesser head. Here we have balance between the two equal pressures.
Do you agree?
If you wish you can carry out the experiment suggested in post #25 and see what happens.
Cheers
Sandro
P.S.
Practically, as others said and as you say in post #32, if you manage to fit a tee and the sender at the output tube at the bottom of the tank every issue is overcome.
It won't to any great degree. As you fill the tank the head pressure will cause the "air" in the tube to compress slightly. Thus the level in the tube will rise slightly. If yo want to do it this way then you need to set it up with an empty tank to start with then fill it up. If you ever take off the tube at a later time and the tank is part full you will have problems setting it up again .
Why bother! Keep it simple. I'll say it for the last time, put the sensor at the bottom.
I'm out of here.