Flow Sensors

Flow Sensors

57 Products
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ifm efector SI6000 Industrial Flow Monitor
$649.33/ea Available
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ifm efector SI6200 Industrial Flow Monitor
$649.33/ea Available
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ifm efector SI6800 Industrial Flow Monitor
$649.33/ea Available
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ifm efector SL5101 Industrial Airflow Monitor
$229.85/ea Available
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ifm efector SM4000 Magnetic Inductive Flow Meter
$713.93/ea Available
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ifm efector SM6000 Magnetic Inductive Flow Meter
$677.89/ea Available
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ifm efector SM6004 Magnetic Inductive Flow Meter
$689.89/ea Available
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ifm efector SM7000 Magnetic Inductive Flow Meter
$811.97/ea Available
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ifm efector SM8000 Magnetic Inductive Flow Meter
$916.81/ea Available
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ifm efector SM8004 Magnetic Inductive Flow Meter
$907.73/ea Available
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ifm efector SM8100 Magnetic Inductive Flow Meter
$914.85/ea Available
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ifm efector SN0150 Flow Sensor Control Monitor
$489.25/ea Available
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ifm efector SV4200 Vortex Flow Meter with Display for Water-Based Media
$395.20/ea Available
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ifm efector SV4500 Vortex Flow Meter with Display for Water-Based Media
$389.50/ea Available
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ifm efector SV5200 Vortex Flow Meter with Display for Water-Based Media
$403.75/ea Available
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ifm efector SV5204 Vortex Flow Meter with Display for Water-Based Media
$406.60/ea Available
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Choosing Flow Sensors components

Flow sensor selection is driven by the media, line size, flow range, accuracy requirement, and the installation context (full-pipe vs. partial, straight-run upstream and downstream). The wrong technology for the media — for example, magnetic flow on a non-conductive fluid — simply will not produce a useful signal.

Specs to confirm before ordering:

  • Media: water, oil, glycol, slurry, air, natural gas, steam
  • Technology: thermal mass (gas, low flow), vortex (steam, gas, clean liquid), paddle wheel (water-like fluids), electromagnetic (conductive liquids only), ultrasonic (clean fluids, clamp-on options), turbine (clean low-viscosity liquids)
  • Pipe size and process connection (threaded, flanged, sanitary clamp, insertion-style)
  • Flow range — units of GPM, L/min, Nm³/h, SCFM as appropriate, with turndown ratio noted
  • Output: switch only, analog 4–20 mA, pulse for totalizer, IO-Link, fieldbus
  • Required straight-run pipe upstream/downstream (often 10D upstream, 5D downstream)
  • Process temperature and pressure
  • Wetted materials compatible with the media
  • Hazardous-area certification if needed (Class I Div 2, ATEX, IECEx)

Common gotchas: electromagnetic meters require a conductive fluid (minimum ~5 µS/cm) — they do not work on hydraulic oil or DI water. Paddle wheels are inexpensive but wear out on dirty or fibrous media. Vortex meters need stable, fully developed flow — installing one immediately after a 90° elbow gives unstable readings. Thermal mass air-flow sensors are sensitive to mounting orientation and to changes in gas composition.

Typical applications: compressed-air consumption monitoring in plant utilities, cooling-water flow verification on welding equipment and induction heaters, batch totalizing in chemical mixing, and lubrication-flow confirmation on rolling mills. On legacy machines, a discontinued OEM flow switch or transmitter is usually best replaced in kind — the original was sized with the pipe geometry in mind, and switching technology can require re-piping.

For obsolete flow sensors, request a quote with the OEM number.

Do you stock obsolete flow sensors and switches?
Yes. Legacy IFM SD codes, GF Signet paddle wheels, end-of-life thermal mass sensors, and discontinued vortex meters are sourced through our supplier network.
Can I use a paddle-wheel sensor on hydraulic oil?
Usually yes for clean oil at moderate viscosity, but check the OEM compatibility chart for the specific bearing and rotor materials. Heavy or particulate-laden oils accelerate wear.
Electromagnetic vs. ultrasonic for water flow — which is better?
Electromagnetic is more accurate and lower cost on conductive water in a known pipe size. Ultrasonic clamp-on is non-invasive (no cutting the pipe) and works where shutdown is impossible, with a small accuracy penalty.
What straight-run distance does the sensor need?
It varies by technology and OEM datasheet — typically 10 pipe diameters upstream and 5 downstream for vortex and electromagnetic. Insufficient straight run is the most common cause of unstable readings.
How are flow sensors shipped?
From St. Louis. Smaller sensors ship parcel; large flanged meters ship LTL. Standard free shipping applies on smaller units; oversized freight is quoted at order.
Is the warranty affected by the media?
The 12-month functional warranty covers electronic and mechanical failure. Wear from abrasive or incompatible media is not covered — verify wetted-parts compatibility before ordering.
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