Search This Blog

Well Type Manometer



Well Type Manometer
A common form of manometer seen in calibration laboratories is the well type, consisting of a single vertical tube and a relatively large reservoir (called the well) acting as the second column. Due to the well’s much larger cross-sectional area, liquid motion inside of it is negligible compared to the motion of liquid inside the clear viewing tube. For all practical purposes, the only liquid motion is inside the smaller tube. Thus, the well manometer provides an easier means of reading pressure.no longer does one have to measure the difference of height between two liquid columns, only the height of a single column.

A Simple Micromanometer


A Simple Micromanometer
Micromanometer consisting of a gas bubble trapped in a clear horizontal tube between two large vertical manometer chambers. If even more sensitivity is desired.

Pressure applied to the top of either vertical chamber will cause the vertical liquid columns to shift just the same as any U-tube manometer. However, the bubble trapped in the clear horizontal tube will move much further than the vertical displacement of either liquid column, owing to the huge difference in cross-sectional area between the vertical chambers and the horizontal tube. This amplification of motion makes the micromanometer exceptionally sensitive to small pressures.

Inclined manometer



Inclined manometer
This way, a greater motion of liquid is required to generate the same hydrostatic pressure (vertical liquid displacement) than in an upright manometer, making the inclined manometer more sensitive.

For an inclined manometer to be a primary device, the inclined tube must be straight and uniform. Dwyer's precision machined solid plastic construction has been applied to a basic line of rugged manometers, inclined and inclined-vertical, which are industry accepted as primary instruments.

U-tube Manometer



U-tube Manometer
The most basic form of manometer is the U-tube manometer. Pressure is read on the scale as the difference in height (h) between the two liquid columns. One nice feature of a manometer is it really cannot become “uncalibrated” so long as the fluid is pure and the assembly is maintained in an upright position. If the fluid used is water, the manometer may be filled and emptied at will, and even rolled up for storage if the tubes are made of flexible plastic.
We may build even more sensitive manometers by purposely inclining one or more of the tubes, so that distance read along the tube length is a fractional proportion of distance measured along the vertical.


Pressure is defined as a force per unit area - and the most accurate way to measure low air pressure is to balance a column of liquid of known weight against it and measure the height of the liquid column so balanced. The units of measure commonly used are inches of mercury (in. Hg), using mercury as the fluid and inches of water (in. w.c.), using water or oil as the fluid.

Figure. 1. In its simplest form the manometer is a U-tube about half filled with liquid. With both ends of the tube open, the liquid is at the same height in each leg.

Figure. 2. When positive pressure is applied to one leg, the liquid is forced down in that leg and up in the other. The difference in height, "h," which is the sum of the readings above and below zero, indicates the pressure.

Figure. 3. When a vacuum is applied to one leg, the liquid rises in that leg and falls in the other. The difference in height, "h," which is the sum of the readings above and below zero, indicates the amount of vacuum.