inductive displacement sensors
Kingmach inductive displacement sensors include the JMDL-31XXAT Smart Multipoint Displacement Meter for tunnels, rock slopes, foundation pits, and surrounding rock layers. This product is not used like a surface joint gauge. It is built for boreholes where movement must be separated by depth. The instrument group includes displacement gauges, PVC measuring rod protective tubes, anchor heads, and multipoint installation kits that support three to five points. During installation, the borehole is prepared, anchor heads are set at selected layers, and grouting fixes each anchor to its target rock or soil zone. Listed models include 50 mm, 100 mm, and 200 mm ranges, all with 0.01 mm resolution. The sensing circuit changes output frequency as the measuring rod moves through the coil, so each channel can report how one anchored layer moves relative to the reference head. This layout is useful when tunnel crown movement, slope slip, or foundation pit deformation may start at one depth before it appears elsewhere. Field records should emphasize borehole number, anchor depth, grout condition, channel order, and the direction of expected movement. During later review, engineers can compare shallow and deep anchors to judge whether the deformation is local relaxation, progressive sliding, or full-section movement. That layered view is the main reason to use a multipoint instrument instead of several unrelated surface gauges.

Application of inductive displacement sensors
In dam and hydropower projects, inductive displacement sensors can track joint opening, bedrock deformation, gate position, dam body movement, tunnel portal movement, and displacement between monitoring points. The pain point is long service life under water level fluctuation, seepage, temperature change, and difficult access. Kingmach JMDL-32XXAT single-point bedrock meters are designed for dam bedrock deformation and provide 50 mm, 100 mm, and 200 mm ranges with 0.01 mm resolution. JMDL-52XXADT differential meters can monitor relative movement in concrete joints with RS485 digital output and plus or minus 0.1%FS accuracy. JMCW-21XXADT magnetostrictive meters provide 0 to 1000 mm absolute position measurement for gates, equipment stroke, or structural movement. JMLS-22XXADT wire rope sensors support up to 2000 mm for larger displacement paths. Combined with water level, seepage, strain, and temperature monitoring, displacement data helps dam managers understand deformation behavior across operating cycles. 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 inductive displacement sensors
The future of inductive displacement sensors 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 inductive displacement sensors
For long-term inductive displacement sensors, maintenance should focus on trend credibility rather than only sensor survival. Review baseline drift, sudden jumps, flat lines, missing data, temperature influence, and disagreement between nearby points. A flat line may mean no movement, but it may also mean a stuck cable, broken rod, frozen channel, or communication failure. A sudden jump may be real deformation, but it may also follow bracket impact, cabinet work, lightning, or power cycling. Kingmach products with stored measurement records, calibration coefficients, zero values, and digital communication help with diagnosis, but field notes remain important. Inspect waterproof seals, cable glands, brackets, anchor heads, cabinets, grounding, and channel labels at planned intervals. Keep displacement data linked with photos, inspection comments, rainfall, water level, construction events, and nearby sensor readings so engineers can trust the long-term movement history. 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 inductive displacement sensors
inductive displacement sensors are often the quiet part of a monitoring system, but they decide whether deformation is understood as a trend or discovered as damage. Kingmach displacement products can be placed at expansion joints, cracks, foundation pits, slope faces, tunnel surrounding rock, dam bedrock, railway subgrades, high-formwork supports, and equipment stroke positions. Many models support digital transmission, anti-interference performance, waterproof sealing, and connection to automatic acquisition systems. The JMDL-21XXAT general-purpose meter records relative displacement and expansion joint movement with 50 mm or 100 mm ranges and 0.01 mm resolution. The JMDL-31XXAT multipoint meter can be installed by drilling and grouting, with anchor heads at different depths. When readings are reviewed with settlement, tilt, rainfall, pore pressure, or construction logs, engineers can see whether movement is seasonal, load-related, excavation-driven, or moving toward a control limit. 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: Which inductive displacement sensors handle long travel?
A: JMLS-22XXADT wire rope sensors cover 0 to 500 mm, 0 to 1000 mm, and 0 to 2000 mm ranges, while JMCW-21XXADT magnetostrictive meters cover 0 to 1000 mm absolute position measurement.
Q: What is the difference between wire rope and magnetostrictive types?
A: Wire rope sensors convert cable extension or retraction into displacement data, while magnetostrictive meters use non-contact sensing for absolute linear position.
Q: What protection ratings are listed?
A: Product information lists IP67 for the JMLS-22XXADT wire rope sensor and IP67 for the JMCW-21XXADT magnetostrictive meter.
Q: What communication is available?
A: Both products list RS485 communication, which supports digital connection to acquisition systems.
Q: Where are long-travel models used?
A: They are used in dam monitoring, geohazard prevention, machinery position, hydraulic cylinders, gate movement, tunnel clearances, and structural displacement between two points.
Reviews
David Wilson
We purchased displacement transducers and settlement sensors, and the quality exceeded our expectations. Easy installation and reliable performance.
Robert Taylor
The weir flow meter is well-built and delivers accurate measurements. Great value for water management applications.
Latest Inquiries
To protect the privacy of our buyers, only public service email domains like Gmail, Yahoo, and MSN will be displayed. Additionally, only a limited portion of the inquiry content will be shown.
Amelia***@gmail.comSingapore
Hello, I am looking for visualization software for monitoring system data analysis. Please let me kn...
Evelyn***@gmail.comSouth Africa
Hi, we are a contractor working on tunnel construction and need settlement sensors and displacement ...
Related product categories
- crack meters
- extensometers
- Differential Displacement Meter
- Smart Crack Gauge
- Wire Rope Displacement Sensor
- GPS Displacement Monitoring System
- displacement meter
- laser displacement meter
- Flexible Displacement Meter
- Multi-point Displacement Meter
- Single-point Displacement Meter
- Smart General-Purpose Displacement Meter

ar
bg
hr
cs
da
nl
fi
fr
de
el
hi
it
ko
no
pl
pt
ro
ru
es
sv
tl
iw
id
lv
lt
sr
sk
sl
uk
vi
et
hu
th
tr
fa
ms
hy
ka
ur
bn
mn
ta
kk
uz
ku






