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gnss settlement sensors

The JMCJ-1003/1005 magnetic ring settlement water level gauge gives Kingmach gnss settlement sensors a manual borehole method for layered ground. It measures underground settlement by electromagnetic induction between the probe and magnetic rings, and it measures water level by conductivity when the probe contacts groundwater. The instrument uses a probe, reel, tape, battery, audible or visual indication, and magnetic rings placed at known depths. Published depth options include 30 m, 50 m, and 100 m, with plus or minus 1 mm accuracy, 9V battery power, maximum current of 50 mA, a probe about 17 cm long and 3 cm in diameter, and -20 degrees Celsius to 60 degrees Celsius operating environment. This product is useful where the engineer needs to know which soil layer compressed, not just how much the surface moved. A careful log should keep borehole number, ring depth, water depth, reference mark, operator, weather, and construction activity together for each visit.

Application of  gnss settlement sensors

Application of gnss settlement sensors

In foundation pit projects, gnss settlement sensors are used during staged excavation to track base uplift, nearby pavement settlement, groundwater response, and vertical movement around retaining systems. The timing of each value matters because deformation may change after dewatering, support installation, soil removal, rainfall, or backfilling. Kingmach JMDL-47XXAT can be embedded to follow base uplift or local settlement, while JMCJ-1003/1005 can read magnetic ring depth and groundwater level in boreholes. Hydrostatic instruments may be added where several elevations around the pit need comparison against a reference. The site team should record excavation depth, support level, water pumping condition, adjacent road or building observations, and first stable baseline beside the settlement curve. If movement grows quickly, the response should include checking the sensor and reference first, then comparing support force, wall displacement, groundwater, and visual inspection before deciding whether excavation can continue. This keeps settlement review tied to the actual construction sequence, which is essential because a pit may behave differently at each excavation depth and support stage. A clear record also helps distinguish base rebound from surrounding ground loss or reference disturbance. The review file should also include reference condition, recent site work, nearby sensor behavior, and inspection notes so later teams can interpret the curve clearly.

The future of gnss settlement sensors

The future of gnss settlement sensors

The future of gnss settlement sensors will give more attention to reference-point control. Hydrostatic leveling systems calculate vertical deformation by comparing measuring points against a reference, so the reference must be protected, inspected, and named clearly in the platform. Kingmach products such as JMDL-62XXADT, JMQJ-62XXADT, and JMYC-62XXAD already support multi-point settlement measurement through connected liquid paths and digital output. Future systems can record reference sensor status, water pipe condition, temperature, zero value, and maintenance events together with each settlement curve. This will help engineers avoid confusing reference drift with real subgrade, bridge, dam, or building movement. Better reference records will also make handover easier when a project moves from construction control to long-term operation. The practical goal is to keep settlement data understandable after the original installation crew has left, so owners can compare old and new readings without reconstructing the field history from memory. The same record should remain readable for designers, contractors, owners, and maintenance teams, because settlement monitoring often continues long after the first construction report is finished.

Care & Maintenance of gnss settlement sensors

Care & Maintenance of gnss settlement sensors

Trend review for gnss settlement sensors should include the surrounding engineering story. Settlement may respond to filling height, excavation depth, dewatering, rainfall, groundwater, reservoir level, traffic loading, concrete curing, or nearby construction. A sudden change may be real, but it may also come from disturbed tubes, moved reference points, loose cables, weak batteries, or manual reading error. Compare each curve with nearby displacement, tilt, strain, load, pore pressure, and water level data when available. For long-term projects, review rate of change as well as total settlement. A small value that keeps accelerating may matter more than a larger value that has stabilized. Maintenance staff should flag date, likely trigger, nearby work, inspection result, and follow-up action in the same record. That habit makes the curve useful during design review, safety meetings, and later handover.

Kingmach gnss settlement sensors

For dams and water-related structures, gnss settlement sensors must be read together with hydraulic conditions. Dam settlement, bridge deflection near water, dyke compression, and foundation deformation may respond to reservoir level, seepage, rainfall, temperature, and seasonal operation. Kingmach JMQJ-62XXADT and JMDL-62XXADT hydrostatic sensors can support multi-point vertical deformation monitoring, while JMCJ-1003/1005 can add groundwater level and layered settlement information. The field record should identify reference point, tube layout, cabinet position, water level, and inspection date. A reading after heavy rain has a different meaning from the same reading during a dry operating period. Settlement data becomes stronger when it is tied to the water story around the structure. The practical aim is a traceable vertical movement history that can support construction control, maintenance planning, and risk review without rewriting the site story. The practical aim is a traceable vertical movement history that can support construction control, maintenance planning, and risk review without rewriting the site story.

FAQ

  • Q: What is JMCJ-1003/1005 used for?
    A: It is used to measure layered underground settlement and groundwater level in foundations, subgrades, foundation pits, embankments, and underground structures.

    Q: How does magnetic ring settlement reading work?
    A: Magnetic rings are placed underground; when the probe senses a ring, audible and visual alerts help the operator read depth from the steel tape at the borehole.

    Q: How is water level detected?
    A: The water level component works by water conductivity and alerts when the probe contacts water.

    Q: What accuracy is listed?
    A: The listed measurement accuracy is plus or minus 1 mm.

    Q: What field records are needed?
    A: Keep borehole number, magnetic ring depth, previous reading, current reading, groundwater level, and operator notes together.

Reviews

Michael Anderson

The strain gauges and load cells are extremely accurate and stable. They performed very well in our bridge monitoring project. Highly recommended!

Matthew Garcia

Instrumentation cables are durable and perform well even in harsh environments. Will definitely order again.

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