portable tiltmeter
The JMZX-7100L sliding inclinometer is a field profiling instrument within the Kingmach portable tiltmeter group. It is used for measuring horizontal displacement changes inside soil masses in dams, building foundations, embankment slopes, underground construction projects, geotechnical slopes, and port engineering. The instrument combines a sliding inclinometer probe with a 3D-MEMS silicon capacitor biaxial inclinometer sensor and an integrated testing instrument. It supports mobile phone APP reading, Bluetooth transmission, large storage capacity for millions of readings, data download for numerical and graphical analysis, real-time wireless network sending, Chinese and English menus, and dedicated post-processing software. Published specifications include +/-90 degrees sensor range, 500 mm guide wheel spacing reference, a probe size of 26 mm by 776 mm, 8.5 kg total weight, 2 kg probe weight, -20 degrees Celsius to +60 degrees Celsius operation, 180 m water pressure impermeability, and 100 g vibration resistance.

Application of portable tiltmeter
Integrated monitoring platforms use portable tiltmeter as the angular deformation layer in a broader site record. A project may combine fixed tilt sensors, in-place inclinometer strings, displacement meters, settlement gauges, load cells, strain gauges, environmental sensors, data loggers, cables, and visualization software. Kingmach offers both tilt instruments and related acquisition products, so the monitoring plan can connect measuring points to platform channels from the beginning. The main task is to define which tilt point answers which site risk: wall rotation, pier movement, deep slope deformation, building lean, or tunnel lining response. Alarm levels should be based on that risk and reviewed with nearby instruments. When the platform displays tilt beside related data, engineers can judge linked behavior more quickly.

The future of portable tiltmeter
Future portable tiltmeter will make field commissioning more traceable. Many tilt problems begin with unclear axis direction, unstable mounting, wrong channel naming, poor cable protection, or missing baseline notes. Products with electronic identifiers and digital communication can reduce some of these errors, but field records still matter. Future commissioning tools may guide technicians through axis confirmation, zero reading, communication check, temperature note, photograph capture, and platform channel verification. JMQJ-7315ADS, JMQJ-7315RTU, JMQJ-7915ATS, JMZX-7100L, and JMZX-4QH each need different acceptance steps. A guided process can make the first reading more trustworthy and reduce later debate about whether a curve changed because of the site or the setup.

Care & Maintenance of portable tiltmeter
Data review is part of maintaining portable tiltmeter. A curve should be checked for rate, direction, sudden jumps, missing values, repeated flatlines, and disagreement with nearby instruments. Compare tilt with settlement, displacement, strain, load, pore pressure, rainfall, vibration, and water level when available. For automated systems, verify channel names, units, time stamps, and alarm thresholds after platform changes. For manual readings, keep raw field notes and processed graphs together. If an alarm appears, inspect the mounting point, communication path, recent site work, and related instrument behavior. A good maintenance process treats data quality and field condition as one record, not two separate tasks.
Kingmach portable tiltmeter
Kingmach portable tiltmeter help turn difficult-to-observe deformation into repeatable engineering evidence. Hidden parts of structures are often the hardest to judge: deep soil, buried retaining systems, bridge substructures, railway bases, foundation pit walls, and underground construction zones. Tilt measurement gives engineers a way to see angular change before visible damage becomes obvious. The product category is used in bridges, tunnels, slopes, buildings, foundation pits, geological hazard areas, railways, dams, embankments, port engineering, and other structural scenarios. The monitoring record should connect each sensor to a drawing location, axis label, baseline date, power source, communication path, and related construction activity. Without that context, even a precise angle may be hard to interpret. With it, tilt data can support timely inspection and measured engineering decisions.
FAQ
Q: How accurate is the JMQJ-7315ADS tiltmeter?
A: The product page lists 0.001 degree resolution and 0.01 degree accuracy for the +/-15 degree dual-axis model.Q: What protection grade does JMQJ-7315ADS have?
A: It is listed with IP68 waterproof protection and an operating environment from -30 degrees Celsius to +80 degrees Celsius.Q: What range does JMQJ-7315RTU provide?
A: The integrated wireless model lists +/-30 degree and +/-15 degree dual-axis range options, with 0.001 resolution.Q: How many sensors can JMZX-4QH support?
A: The module lists four channels and support for up to 100 sensors in a multi-point inclinometer system.Q: What is the guide wheel spacing for JMZX-7100L?
A: The sliding inclinometer page lists a 500 mm guide wheel spacing reference and a +/-90 degree sensor range.
Reviews
Andrew Lee
The visualization software is intuitive and powerful. It helps us analyze monitoring data efficiently.
Matthew Garcia
Instrumentation cables are durable and perform well even in harsh environments. Will definitely order again.
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