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crack meters

Kingmach crack meters cover a broad group of displacement measurement products for civil, geotechnical, hydropower, transportation, and industrial projects. The product category includes short-range crack gauges, general-purpose displacement meters, differential displacement meters, flexible geogrid meters, multipoint rock displacement meters, single-point bedrock meters, formwork displacement meters, wire rope sensors, magnetostrictive displacement meters, and GNSS displacement devices. This range matters because displacement measurement is not one mechanical condition. A bridge joint may need 20 mm to 100 mm differential monitoring, while a draw-wire application may require 500 mm to 2000 mm travel. Some projects need embedded anchoring and grouting, while others need surface brackets, universal bases, or a cable pulled between two points. Kingmach supports these different layouts with digital output, stored calibration data, waterproof structures, and automatic acquisition compatibility. The goal is to give engineers stable movement data that can be traced from sensor body to monitoring platform. 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 meters

Application of crack meters

In bridge monitoring, crack meters are used at expansion joints, bearing zones, abutments, arch supports, deck gaps, and structural interfaces where relative movement affects service safety. The common pain point is that bridge movement may look normal during one inspection but reveal risk when compared over temperature cycles, traffic load, and maintenance events. Kingmach JMDL-52XXADT differential meters cover 20 mm, 50 mm, and 100 mm ranges with 0.01 mm resolution, plus or minus 0.1%FS accuracy, RS485 output, and low temperature drift. JMDL-22XXAT crack gauges can track joint opening or crack width up to 200 mm, while JMLS-22XXADT wire rope sensors can monitor longer movement paths up to 2000 mm. When displacement readings are paired with strain gauges, load cells, tiltmeters, and weather data, bridge teams can distinguish seasonal joint travel from abnormal movement, bearing restraint, foundation settlement, or localized damage. 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 meters

The future of crack meters

The future of crack meters will include more mixed measurement packages rather than single-sensor orders. A slope package may combine GNSS, multipoint displacement, crack gauges, pore pressure, rainfall, and tilt. A bridge package may combine differential displacement, strain gauges, load cells, accelerometers, temperature, and bearing inspection records. A tunnel package may combine multipoint displacement, convergence, lining strain, water pressure, and vibration. Kingmach already provides a broad product ecosystem across displacement, strain, load, settlement, tilt, environmental monitoring, acquisition equipment, cables, and software. The next step is project-specific packaging where the displacement instrument is selected together with its data logger, cable, cabinet, communication route, warning logic, and maintenance plan. That approach reduces mismatched hardware and makes the monitoring system easier to operate after handover. It also helps procurement teams compare complete monitoring functions instead of comparing sensor names alone. For complex infrastructure, the package should define which movement point answers which engineering question before hardware is ordered.

Care & Maintenance of crack meters

Care & Maintenance of crack meters

For embedded crack meters such as multipoint and bedrock displacement meters, maintenance depends heavily on installation records because the sensing parts may not be visible after grouting or backfilling. For JMDL-31XXAT multipoint meters, keep drilling depth, anchor head depth, grouting date, point number, cable route, and baseline readings in one record. The system may monitor three to five points, so channel naming must be exact. For JMDL-32XXAT single-point bedrock meters, record flange position, tie rod condition, anchor point, PVC pipe route, and expected movement direction. During service, compare adjacent depths rather than reading each channel alone. A shallow layer moving while deeper layers remain steady has a different meaning from full-depth displacement. Do not pull or shorten cables during cabinet work, and protect exposed sections from water, rodents, sharp edges, and construction traffic. 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 meters

In structural monitoring, crack meters 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: What are crack meters 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.

Joshua Clark

We ordered a full monitoring solution including sensors and data loggers. Everything works seamlessly together. Great supplier!

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