Ultrasonic level sensors come in a wide variety of sizes and prices. It all depends on what your application will be and what your needs are.
Today, we will compare the main uses of a $50 (or less) ultrasonic level sensor to a $500 advanced ultrasonic sensor.
Most often basic ultrasonic sensors are used in pairs. One sensor is used to transmit the sound pulses and another sensor is used to receive the sound waves that have been bounced back from the target.
Ultrasonic sensors are generally designed for short-range general sensing applications such as position detection, position location, and collision avoidance. Less expensive ultrasonic level sensors are manufactured mainly as a component piece suitable for mounting on a PCB board which is part of larger OEM devices such as robots, remote-controlled vehicles, and automobiles.
Because of their design and size, most basic level sensors are made with factory preset parameters that are not adjustable. As a result, these level sensors will be less accurate - the readings might differ based on fluctuations in temperature and humidity.
When choosing a basic ultrasonic level sensor, you decide what sensing range you need and what transmitting frequency you need. Many basic ultrasonic level sensors transmit a pulse burst every 0.5ms at 40kHz.
Some basic ultrasonic sensors cost less than $10. They are a simple choice for simple sensing and ultrasonic level measurement. These are typically cheap ultrasonic transducers on a basic circuit board without programming of any kind. These less expensive ultrasonic transducers are great for hobbyists.
Advanced ultrasonic sensors are used when a constant, highly accurate ultrasonic level measurement is desired. Examples are tanks, river heights, flood or flow levels as well object proximity as seen in a carwash. Full-scale sensing ranges vary from as little as 79 inches up to 50 ft.
Advanced ultrasonic sensors are one-piece sensors with outdoor-rated housings. They have a single ultrasonic transducer that transmits and receives the ultrasonic sound wave.
Most models have an analog output, such as current (4/20mA) or voltage (0-2 VDC or 0-5 VDC), or a digital output (RS-232 or RS-485/Modbus). Solid state relay outputs or NPN trip points are also common outputs.
When installed, advanced ultrasonic sensors are mounted to their associated equipment usually with an NPT plug or bracket.
Download Ultrasonic Level Sensor Datasheets & Manuals Here
Here are a few examples of important parameters that are not adjustable with basic ultrasonic sensors but are user adjustable with advanced ultrasonic sensors.
Though advanced ultrasonic level sensors are considerably more expensive (often greater than $500) than basic ultrasonic sensors, their durable construction, high accuracy, output capability, and adjustable parameters provide a great solution for countless non-contact measurement applications.
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