Smart Single-Point Settlement Gauge
Kingmach Smart Single-Point Settlement Gauge should be selected from the engineering question outward. If the question is pile foundation settlement or tunnel bottom uplift, an embedded single-point gauge such as JMDL-47XXAT may fit the job. If the question is bridge deflection or building settlement across several points, hydrostatic instruments such as JMDL-62XXADT or JMQJ-62XXADT can compare vertical change against a reference. If the question is large settlement during soft foundation treatment or reclamation filling, JMYC-62XXAD provides wider travel from 500 mm to 4000 mm. If the question involves layered soil settlement and groundwater level, JMCJ-1003/1005 gives a borehole-based manual method. A good specification therefore starts with movement scale, reading frequency, access, groundwater condition, reference stability, and report needs. During procurement review, engineers should check range, resolution, accuracy, output signal, installation method, and maintenance access together rather than selecting from model names alone. The acceptance record should keep model, range, reference relationship, baseline, installation detail, and channel name together for later review. The acceptance record should keep model, range, reference relationship, baseline, installation detail, and channel name together for later review. The acceptance record should keep model, range, reference relationship, baseline, installation detail, and channel name together for later review. The acceptance record should keep model, range, reference relationship, baseline, installation detail, and channel name together for later review.

Application of Smart Single-Point Settlement Gauge
Pile foundations, dykes, and embankments use Smart Single-Point Settlement Gauge to verify vertical response during loading, filling, or long-term service. Kingmach JMDL-47XXAT is described for pile foundation settlement, dyke compression deformation, embankment heave, roadbed settlement, and base uplift in deep foundation pits. Its assembly includes a settlement plate, electrical displacement sensor, measuring rod with metal flexible conduit, anchor head, extension rod, and bottom anchor head. Published range options are 100 mm, 200 mm, 300 mm, and 400 mm, with gauge lengths from 760 mm to 2210 mm. Because the sensor is embedded, the installation record is almost as important as the reading itself. Crews should document depth, plate position, rod connection, cable exit, protection method, and nearby fill material before the location is covered. During loading, the curve can be checked against fill height, pile test stage, water condition, and surface survey marks. The side-exit cable arrangement helps reduce interference during pavement compaction, which is useful when monitoring must continue as construction equipment passes over the area.

The future of Smart Single-Point Settlement Gauge
Data fusion will define the future role of Smart Single-Point Settlement Gauge in structural health monitoring. Settlement should be reviewed beside displacement, tilt, strain, load, pore pressure, rainfall, vibration, and water level data. For example, a subgrade settlement trend may be more meaningful when rainfall and traffic loading are visible. A foundation pit uplift reading may need groundwater and support force context. A bridge deflection reading may need temperature and bearing information. Kingmach settlement products can provide the vertical movement layer in this wider record. When different sensor types are reviewed together, warnings can be based on relationships rather than a single number. That helps engineers prioritize site checks and avoid overreacting to harmless movement or missing linked changes across several instruments. Future platforms should make these relationships easy to review without hiding the raw settlement readings.

Care & Maintenance of Smart Single-Point Settlement Gauge
Replacement or recalibration of Smart Single-Point Settlement Gauge must preserve continuity in the settlement record. Do not overwrite earlier data or silently move the zero value. Record replacement date, reason, model, range, serial number, reference point, first stable reading, and any change to cable, tube, cabinet, borehole, or mounting setup. If a hydrostatic reference point is moved, explain how old and new readings should be compared. If a magnetic ring borehole is repaired, note whether depth references changed. If an embedded gauge is abandoned, mark the point status clearly in reports instead of leaving a silent gap. Settlement monitoring often matters because it lasts for years, so maintenance events must be visible to future reviewers. A clean handover file should let a new engineer understand not only the curve, but also every instrument event that shaped it.
Kingmach Smart Single-Point Settlement Gauge
Hydrostatic Smart Single-Point Settlement Gauge are useful when several vertical movement points must be compared against a reference rather than read as isolated values. Kingmach JMDL-62XXADT and JMQJ-62XXADT use connected liquid paths and digital output to monitor vertical deformation in structures such as bridges, dams, tunnels, large buildings, and subgrades. The JMDL-62XXADT lists 50 mm, 100 mm, and 200 mm ranges with 0.01 mm resolution and RS485 output. The JMQJ-62XXADT micro range hydrostatic level sensor lists 50 mm and 100 mm ranges, 0.01 mm resolution, RS485 signal, and IP68 protection. These products are most useful when the tube route, reference point, cabinet, and baseline are documented clearly. If the reference is unstable, every curve downstream becomes harder to trust. A good point record also names the reference location, installation elevation, data channel, and maintenance access so later readings can be checked without guesswork. A good point record also names the reference location, installation elevation, data channel, and maintenance access so later readings can be checked without guesswork.
FAQ
Q: What does JMDL-47XXAT measure?
A: It measures in-situ subgrade settlement, embankment heave, foundation pit base uplift, tunnel bottom uplift, dyke compression, and pile foundation settlement.
Q: What ranges are listed for JMDL-47XXAT?
A: The listed ranges are 100 mm, 200 mm, 300 mm, and 400 mm, with 0.01 mm resolution on the 100 and 200 mm models and 0.1 mm on larger models.
Q: How is the gauge installed?
A: It uses a settlement plate, electrical displacement sensor, measuring rod, metal flexible conduit, anchor head, extension rod, and bottom anchor head.
Q: Can traffic operation continue during monitoring?
A: The side-exit cable routing is designed to avoid interference with pavement compaction and can support monitoring during traffic operation when installed correctly.
Q: What should be recorded during installation?
A: Record plate position, anchor depth, extension length, cable route, baseline, model, range, and construction stage.
Reviews
David Wilson
We purchased displacement transducers and settlement sensors, and the quality exceeded our expectations. Easy installation and reliable performance.
James Thompson
The tiltmeters and accelerometers are very sensitive and provide precise data. Perfect for our structural health monitoring system.
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