💦 Flow with Confidence: The Ultimate Water Sensor Switch!
The G3/4" Male Thread Brass Water Flow Sensor Switch is a high-performance liquid flowmeter designed for precision and durability. With a flow range of 1-30L/Min and a robust brass construction, it is perfect for various applications including water heaters and dispensers. Operating within a voltage range of DC5-15V and tolerating pressures up to 1.75Mpa, this sensor ensures reliable performance in diverse environments.
M**L
Nicely built water flow sensor
I was looking for a component to measure the water flow at a water hydrant (outdoor spigot) at my barn so that I could tie this into my home automation system. This not only can give me a warning if I forget and leave the water on (ask me how easy this is to do when it's 400' from your house), but it can also record water usage patterns and total water consumption.Only downside to this sensor (for those of us in the US) is that it has BSP threads. I had to use a total of 4 adapters to insert this sensor between my hydrant and the hose splitter: GHT->NPT, NPT->BSP, (sensor), BSP->NPT, NPT->GHT. So the entire assembly is a little long, but I had plenty of room so not a problem for me. Sensor looks well machined and (so far) has been very reliable.The specified counts didn't match reality for me. By filling a 5 gallon bucket multiple times, I found that I get about 1588 pulses per gallon. Your mileage may vary.I used an underground rated cable to run the power and data lines from this sensor underground and into my tack room, where I placed the rest of the electronics to tie this into my system. This comprised a TTL buffer (as the output of this sensor has very little drive capability), then a voltage divider to reduce the TTL output to 3.3V max, which fed into an ESP8266. Software on the 8266 was built with ESPhome and simply calculates the gallons per hour and total gallons consumed and feeds those to Home Assistant (see picture).
T**.
works well after thorough calibration
works well at higher flows. doesn't report anything below 2-3 L/min. needs calibrating. NPT adapters are hard to find.
R**.
Not as described
Did not work as described and had to return
S**T
Great little item
Single unit thermistor and hall effect flow meter is a great combination. It would be even better if the thermistor was 10K vs 50k since most inexpensive thermostats use 10k thermistors. Also a flow SWITCH vs a meter output would be a great option as many applications require a switch when flow is present. Converting a meter output to a switch requires additional circuitry.
A**R
el sensor de flujo de agua, es tal como lo necesito, y el envío super eficiente en tiempo
Estoy muy satisfecho con haber comprado el producto con ustedes, la logística y la calidad del producto excelente............
S**W
Great meter but hard to find / expensive thread adapters
Be nice if the manufacturer could make a version with US connectors, or point to a source for reasonably priced adapters. It's very difficult to find BSP adapters and when you do they are expensive. I ended up using a hose connector which worked great for my conditions, no leakage. Other than that the flow meter seems great. Very reproducible results.
R**S
Make sure you know what u want this isn’t on or off
Most flow sensors I’ve seen complete a circuit when liquid flows through them. This one doesn’t you need a controller for this to work correctly
X**R
It works, not very accurate and worried about harmful metals (no true confirmed ROHS compliance)
Every sensor like this comes with a K factor, understood. However that K factor should be set once and not having to be adjusted every day almost. I am totally fine with adjustments periodically as (fluid) contaminents etc might affect the flow, and therefore require the offset adjustment. However this one requires it to be adjusted too frequently.Also it has BPT (british pipe standard) not NPT, there are adapters for it, another $10 to include.You can't teflon your way out! (tried it!)Separately, I thought this was locally made, but it is coming from the east. As regulations are differently there and there is no formal statement that it is true ROHS compliant, I am worried that it has "relaxed" the implementation.There is always a clear difference why some of the same stuff is more expensive, and the reason is quality and regulation. It's another example of you get what you pay for.