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Settlement Monitoring Rod

The JMYC-62XXAD wide-range differential pressure hydrostatic level sensor extends Kingmach Settlement Monitoring Rod into projects where settlement may be too large for micro range instruments. It works as a reference-point hydrostatic system for uneven pavement settlement, nonlinear cross-section settlement, soft foundation treatment, land reclamation foundations, dam settlement, bridge deflection, slope stability, and building settlement. Published specifications include 500 mm, 1000 mm, 2000 mm, and 4000 mm ranges, 0.1 mm resolution, 0.2%FS accuracy, RS485 output, DC 9V to 24V supply, power consumption below 0.5W, and an operating temperature from -30 degrees Celsius to +80 degrees Celsius. The instrument is especially relevant when a profile may keep moving during filling, preloading, or staged construction. Planning should define the fixed reference point first, then divide the section into measuring locations that can reveal uneven deformation. Cable protection, cabinet access, sensor elevation, and construction vehicle paths need early coordination. When the data is reviewed later, the wide range helps distinguish gradual consolidation from sudden local movement across a road, reclamation area, or embankment section.

Application of  Settlement Monitoring Rod

Application of Settlement Monitoring Rod

Integrated structural health monitoring uses Settlement Monitoring Rod as the vertical deformation layer within a larger data set. Settlement rarely explains a site by itself; it usually needs to be read with tilt, strain, load, pore pressure, displacement, water level, rainfall, vibration, and inspection findings. Kingmach settlement products support several measurement styles, including embedded single-point gauges for foundations and subgrades, hydrostatic level sensors for multi-point comparison, wide-range differential pressure instruments for long profiles, and magnetic ring gauges for layered soil observation. Before installation, each point should have a reason: a pier bearing seat, a soft ground section, a basement wall, a tunnel invert, or a dam gallery position. The alarm logic should then match that reason, not just a generic number. For example, a slow uniform drift across all hydrostatic channels may mean something different from one local point moving against a steady reference. A well organized system keeps channel names, drawings, baselines, thresholds, and inspection duties connected so the team can act on the signal instead of debating where it came from.

The future of Settlement Monitoring Rod

The future of Settlement Monitoring Rod

The future of Settlement Monitoring Rod will also depend on better installation kits. Many settlement errors begin with field details: a tube is kinked, a plate is disturbed during compaction, a ring depth is recorded poorly, a cable exits at the wrong place, or a reference point is not protected. Future products can reduce these problems with clearer connectors, pre-labeled cables, stronger side-exit protection, better probe markings, and commissioning checklists. Kingmach JMDL-47XXAT already uses side-exit cable routing to avoid pavement compaction interference, and hydrostatic systems rely on clean tube installation. Better installation accessories will make the first baseline more trustworthy. In settlement monitoring, a clean start is often more useful than a later attempt to correct a poor record. The practical goal is to keep settlement data understandable after the original installation crew has left, so owners can compare old and new readings without reconstructing the field history from memory. The same record should remain readable for designers, contractors, owners, and maintenance teams, because settlement monitoring often continues long after the first construction report is finished.

Care & Maintenance of Settlement Monitoring Rod

Care & Maintenance of Settlement Monitoring Rod

Baseline control for Settlement Monitoring Rod is a continuing maintenance task. A zero value should be recorded only after plates, rods, anchors, hydrostatic tubes, reference sensors, magnetic rings, probes, cabinets, and power supply are stable. If the baseline is taken during active compaction, dewatering, grouting, traffic vibration, or support adjustment, every later value may be difficult to explain. Kingmach products can support manual or remote readings, but both methods need a clear starting point. Keep the baseline date, weather, water level, construction stage, operator, and instrument status in the file. If a point must be reset, keep the old value, the new value, and the reason for the change. Do not erase earlier trend data to make a curve look tidy. Future reviewers need to know when the measuring system changed, otherwise normal maintenance can be mistaken for real ground movement.

Kingmach Settlement Monitoring Rod

For dams and water-related structures, Settlement Monitoring Rod must be read together with hydraulic conditions. Dam settlement, bridge deflection near water, dyke compression, and foundation deformation may respond to reservoir level, seepage, rainfall, temperature, and seasonal operation. Kingmach JMQJ-62XXADT and JMDL-62XXADT hydrostatic sensors can support multi-point vertical deformation monitoring, while JMCJ-1003/1005 can add groundwater level and layered settlement information. The field record should identify reference point, tube layout, cabinet position, water level, and inspection date. A reading after heavy rain has a different meaning from the same reading during a dry operating period. Settlement data becomes stronger when it is tied to the water story around the structure. The practical aim is a traceable vertical movement history that can support construction control, maintenance planning, and risk review without rewriting the site story. The practical aim is a traceable vertical movement history that can support construction control, maintenance planning, and risk review without rewriting the site story.

FAQ

  • Q: Which Settlement Monitoring Rod fit hydrostatic leveling?
    A: JMDL-62XXADT, JMQJ-62XXADT, and JMYC-62XXAD are used for hydrostatic or differential pressure settlement monitoring.

    Q: What resolution is available?
    A: JMDL-62XXADT and JMQJ-62XXADT list 0.01 mm resolution, while JMYC-62XXAD lists 0.1 mm resolution for wider ranges.

    Q: Where are micro range hydrostatic sensors used?
    A: They are used for dam settlement, bridge deflection, slope stability, building settlement, tunnel settlement, and subgrade settlement.

    Q: What protection rating is listed for JMQJ-62XXADT?
    A: The product information lists IP68 protection.

    Q: What can damage hydrostatic readings?
    A: Leaking tubes, air pockets, poor reference control, temperature effects, cable faults, and disturbed sensor elevations can all affect the record.

Reviews

Matthew Garcia

Instrumentation cables are durable and perform well even in harsh environments. Will definitely order again.

Christopher Martinez

Very satisfied with the readouts & data loggers. User-friendly interface and supports multiple sensor inputs.

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