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Crack Meter

The JMDL-52XXADT Differential Displacement Meter is one of the higher precision Kingmach Crack Meter for structural joints and relative movement. It uses two coupled inductive coils. As the measuring rod moves, magnetic flux changes in the two coils are equal in magnitude and opposite in direction, and the difference is calculated to reduce environmental interference and thermal drift. Listed ranges are 20 mm, 50 mm, and 100 mm. The product provides 0.01 mm resolution, plus or minus 0.1%FS accuracy, RS485 digital output, DC 9V to 24V supply, power consumption below 0.4 W, long-term stability of plus or minus 0.1%FS per year, and an operating temperature range from -40 degrees Celsius to +80 degrees Celsius. Temperature drift is listed as 0.001 mm per degree Celsius. These specifications are useful for bridges, railways, hydropower structures, dams, and buildings where small relative movement needs to be measured across seasons and load changes. During project setup, the measuring point should be matched with the expected travel direction, available mounting space, cable route, and required acquisition interval. This prevents a short-range joint instrument from being used on a long-travel point, or an exposed sensor from being placed where an embedded anchor is needed. It also helps the monitoring team set a baseline that can be defended during acceptance and later maintenance review.

Application of  Crack Meter

Application of Crack Meter

In foundation pit and deep excavation projects, Crack Meter are used to watch retaining walls, soldier piles, soil nails, nearby pavements, basement walls, and adjacent structures as excavation stages remove support from the ground. The main site concern is not only how far one point moves, but whether movement grows after each excavation layer, support installation, dewatering step, or backfill stage. Kingmach JMDL-32XXAT single-point bedrock meters can measure embedded displacement at a selected reference layer, while JMDL-22XXAT crack gauges follow opening at nearby structures or retaining elements. JMDL-52XXADT differential meters provide high-resolution relative movement at joints or structural interfaces, and JMLS-22XXADT wire rope sensors can cover longer exposed paths where access is available. A useful pit monitoring plan records excavation depth, support timing, groundwater level, construction vibration, and surrounding building observations beside each displacement curve. This helps engineers distinguish bracket disturbance from real ground movement, and it supports faster decisions when a wall, road edge, or adjacent building begins to respond to excavation. During review, the same point should be compared with nearby settlement, tilt, support force, groundwater, and inspection notes so the movement is interpreted as part of the excavation behavior rather than as a single isolated value. during maintenance.

The future of Crack Meter

The future of Crack Meter

Future Crack Meter 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 Meter

Care & Maintenance of Crack Meter

For draw-wire Crack Meter, the cable path is the part that most often decides data quality. Kingmach JMLS-22XXADT wire rope sensors use a plastic-coated stainless steel cable, spool, precision rotary sensor, RS485 communication, IP67 sealing, and ranges up to 2000 mm. During installation, align the cable with the expected movement direction, keep the pull smooth, and avoid rubbing against concrete edges, steel corners, temporary supports, or moving machinery. Do not overextend the cable beyond its range, and do not let it snap back during inspection. Check the anchor point, cable coating, spool movement, connector sealing, and lightning protection after storms or heavy site work. For long-term dam, tunnel, slope, or machinery monitoring, include cable tension and cable path photos in routine maintenance records. A clean cable route gives more reliable displacement data than any later software correction. 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 Meter

Crack Meter help engineers separate normal movement from structural risk. A bridge expansion joint may move with temperature, a tunnel lining may shift after excavation, and a slope may creep slowly before an alarm condition appears. Kingmach displacement products use several sensing routes, including inductive frequency modulation, differential coil measurement, magnetostrictive sensing, draw-wire conversion, and GNSS-based displacement tracking. Ranges can start at 20 mm for joint monitoring and extend to 2000 mm for draw-wire applications, while selected smart models store model data, serial numbers, calibration coefficients, zero values, temperature, and hundreds of measurement records. This makes the reading easier to trace during acceptance, maintenance, and later review. For a project buyer, the practical question is whether the movement point is exposed, embedded, multi-depth, long-distance, waterproof, or tied to geogrid. Kingmach provides different forms for those different site conditions. 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: What are Crack Meter used for?
    A: They measure movement such as relative displacement, crack width, expansion joint travel, bedrock deformation, rock layer movement, geogrid deformation, formwork settlement, and equipment stroke.

    Q: Which Kingmach models belong to this category?
    A: Common models include JMDL-21XXAT, JMDL-22XXAT, JMDL-24XXAT, JMDL-31XXAT, JMDL-32XXAT, JMDL-49XXAT, JMDL-52XXADT, JMCW-21XXADT, and JMLS-22XXADT.

    Q: What range should be selected first?
    A: Start from the expected movement. Short joint monitoring may need 20 mm to 100 mm, while draw-wire or equipment travel may require 500 mm to 2000 mm.

    Q: Can these products support remote monitoring?
    A: Yes. Several Kingmach models support digital transmission, RS485 communication, automatic acquisition, integrated testers, or unattended monitoring systems.

    Q: Why is the baseline reading important?
    A: All later movement is compared against the starting point. The baseline should be recorded after the sensor, bracket, anchor, cable, and structure are stable.

Reviews

Andrew Lee

The visualization software is intuitive and powerful. It helps us analyze monitoring data efficiently.

David Wilson

We purchased displacement transducers and settlement sensors, and the quality exceeded our expectations. Easy installation and reliable performance.

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