Why Your Flow or Pressure Signal is Unstable – And How to Fix It Without Changing the Instrument - Just Measure it

Why Your Flow or Pressure Signal is Unstable – And How to Fix It Without Changing the Instrument

🧠 Introduction 

If your DCS screen shows constantly fluctuating values, or your control valve keeps moving back and forth, the problem may not be your instrument.

In many cases, incorrect damping settings are the real reason behind unstable signals.

The good news?
👉 You can often fix this without replacing any equipment.

In this guide, we’ll explain:

  • What damping time really is
  • Why it affects your signal stability
  • How to set it correctly for different instruments
  • Practical tuning methods used in real industrial sites

🔬 What Is Damping Time?

Damping time is a parameter used in transmitters (flow, pressure, level, temperature) to smooth the output signal.

Technically, it acts as a low-pass filter, meaning:

  • Fast fluctuations (noise) are reduced
  • Real process changes are still tracked

But there is always a trade-off:

Small DampingLarge Damping
Fast responseSlow response
More noiseSmooth signal

👉 The key is finding the right balance

⚠️ What Happens If Damping Is Set Wrong?

❌ Too Small (Fast but Noisy)

  • Signal fluctuates rapidly
  • Control valve keeps oscillating
  • Operators cannot read real values
  • Frequent false alarms

👉 Common in flow measurement (especially DP or vortex)

❌ Too Large (Stable but Dangerous)

  • Slow response to real changes
  • Delay in detecting pressure or temperature spikes
  • Reduced control system stability
  • Dangerous for safety systems (SIS)

👉 Especially critical in:

  • Pressure protection systems
  • Fast chemical reactions

⚙️ Real Industrial Case

Case: Reciprocating Pump Pressure Signal

A customer reported severe pressure fluctuation at the pump outlet.

  • Initial damping: 1 second
  • Signal: highly unstable
  • Control valve: constant oscillation

After adjustment:

  • New damping: 6 seconds
  • Result:
    ✔ Stable signal
    ✔ Reduced valve wear
    ✔ Improved process control

👉 No hardware change required — only parameter optimization

🔧 Recommended Damping Settings by Instrument

Pressure / Differential Pressure Transmitters

ApplicationRecommended
Stable process0.5 – 1 s
Flow (DP measurement)1 – 3 s
Reciprocating pump3 – 8 s
Safety (SIS)≤ 1 s

Flow Meters

TypeRecommended
Electromagnetic1 – 3 s
Vortex1 – 5 s
CoriolisFactory default
DP (orifice)2 – 6 s

👉 For slurry or unstable flow, slightly higher damping is recommended.

💡 In our electromagnetic flow meters (PTFE lining / 316L electrodes), damping can be easily adjusted via HART or local display, allowing flexible tuning on site.

Level Instruments

  • Stirred tanks → 5 – 30 s
  • Storage tanks → 1 – 3 s
  • Radar level → 3 – 5 s (default)

Temperature

  • Normal: 0 – 2 s
  • Fast processes: 1 – 3 s

👉 Note: Temperature sensors are naturally slow — avoid excessive damping.

🎯 How to Set Damping Correctly (Practical Method)

Follow this proven field method:

Step 1 – Start Small

Set damping to minimum (0.1–0.5 s)

→ Observe raw signal noise

Step 2 – Evaluate Process Needs

Ask:

  • Is this for control or monitoring?
  • How fast should the system respond?

👉 Rule of thumb:

Damping ≤ 20–30% of process time constant

Step 3 – Increase Gradually

Adjust step by step:

  • 0.5 → 1 → 2 → 3 seconds

Stop when:

✔ Signal becomes stable
✔ No excessive delay

Step 4 – Verify Response

Introduce a small disturbance and check:

  • Does the instrument react fast enough?

⚠️ Important: Damping in Safety Systems (SIS)

For safety loops (SIL systems):

👉 Damping must be as small as possible

Typical requirement:

  • ≤ 1 second

Because:

  • Any delay = risk of accident

🧠 Advanced Insight (For Engineers)

Damping behaves like a first-order filter:

  • Time constant = τ
  • Cutoff frequency ≈ 1 / (2π·τ)

👉 Larger τ = lower bandwidth = slower response

In control systems:

  • Too much damping introduces phase lag
  • May cause instability or oscillation

💡 Pro Tip (Very Important)

Before increasing damping:

👉 Always check:

  • Pipe vibration
  • EMI interference
  • Two-phase flow
  • Incorrect installation

Because:

👉 Damping should not be used to hide real problems

📩 Need Help with Your Application?

If you’re facing:

  • Unstable flow readings
  • Pressure signal oscillation
  • Control valve hunting
  • Difficult process conditions

👉 Feel free to contact me with your application details:

  • Medium
  • Flow range
  • Pressure & temperature
  • Pipe size

I can help you:

✔ Select the right instrument
✔ Optimize damping settings
✔ Improve system stability

Share This Story, Choose Your Platform!

Contact Us

    Please prove you are human by selecting the key.
    Translate »