Product category:
Control and inspection equipment and services
News Release from: Kistler Instruments | Subject: torque sensors
Edited by the Manufacturingtalk Editorial
Team on 10 August 2005
New torque sensors extend range
Kistler has extended the range of its piezoelectric reaction torque sensors with the addition of two new models.
This family of sensors, which now covers the whole measuring range from +/-1, +/-10, +/-25, +/-200 and +/-1,000Nm, is suitable for torques from approx 0.001 Nm, with each sensor providing an extremely wide measuring range, one of the major advantages of piezoelectric sensors
This article was originally published on Manufacturingtalk on 27 May 2004 at 8.00am (UK)
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Compact torque sensors suit many applications
Piezoelectric reaction torque sensors, having high sensitivity, extremely rigid construction and compactness, can be adapted very easily and flexibly to suit a wide variety of installations.
Torque sensors have very wide measuring range
Two new model s have been added to a range of piezoelectric reaction torque sensors, of which each sensor provides an extremely wide measuring range.
The new torque sensors are supplied calibrated for 100 % and 10 % of the measuring range with additional calibration ranges available as an option.
The sensors are especially suited to manufacturing process monitoring and can be adapted to most configurations.
Each has an end flange with four or six threaded mounting holes and a centering seat for precise coaxial installation with a central hole to allow a shaft to pass through the sensor.
The high sensitivity, extremely rigid construction and compact dimensions of the sensors make them particularly suited to monitoring applications in assembly processes and product testing where rotary movements are involved.
Typically, screw, bolt or nut tightening to specific torque, rotary potentiometer and switch testing and screw cap fitting.
As piezoelectric sensors are immune from fatigue and wear when properly used, their service life is virtually unlimited making them especially suitable for use as calibration sensors as well as for general torque measurement in both manufacturing and RandD applications.
Established in Wintherthur (Switzerland) in 1957, Kistler Instruments is represented in over 50 countries and has subsidiaries in Germany, France, Italy, UK, Japan, USA, China, Korea and Singapore.
Heavy investment in research and development, 15% of staff worldwide are engaged in research and development, has generated a number of innovations using piezoelectric, piezoresistive and capacitive techniques to provide solutions to numerous force, pressure and acceleration measuring problems.
These innovations include the world's first commercial quartz sensor, two-wire constant current technology to integrate sensors with microelectronic circuitry, high-temperature pressure sensors for use up to 400 Deg C and three-component force measuring sensors.
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