Micro Motion Meters confirm they are in calibration!!
Several months ago we received a new sanitary version
Micro Motion H-Series sensor with a Foundation Fieldbus Micro Motion 2700 Transmitter for our Proof of Concept System (see Blog Post – Proving Smart Concepts). I installed it on one of the four segments we have in the system and didn’t get a chance to do very much with it. This week I was getting the system ready for a customer demo and had the opportunity to take a little closer look at the unit.
One of the options with this unit is a function called Smart Meter Verification. The Micro Motion web site describes this function as:
Testing the entire Coriolis meter – from the structural integrity of the flow tubes to the performance of the signal processing electronics – quickly and whenever you want without any impact on the measurement makes Micro Motion Smart Meter Verification invaluable to your operation.
And it does just that. . . . . . .
Read more: Meter VerificationDo you see anything different or out of the ordinary in this screen capture?
No? Looks pretty much like a standard DeltaV Explorer view of a DeltaV network. In the left center is a DeltaV Foundation Fieldbus I/O Card with Port 1 highlighted. So what’s the deal?
Read more: S-Series Integrated Power Foundation Fieldbus CardRosemount Remote Indicator for Foundation Fieldbus (Model 752R)
For several years we have had a Rosemount Remote Indicator for Foundation Fieldbus (Model 752R) in our Proof of Concept System. We have recently configured it to display eight (8) variables from devices in the system. That’s what the 752R does; it displays parameters you configure for it to display. The parameters can be anything in the DeltaV System.
One (1) parameter is from a Rosemount 848T Temperature Transmitter.

Temperature from the Rosemount 848T
Read more: Pretty Cool DeviceWireless Blitz – Wando to North Charleston to Aiken to Camden to Eastover to Columbia to Wando to Georgetown to Florence to Kingstree to Bennettsville.
This is the path Wireless Blitz Lunch-n-Learns teams have traveled. As you can see by the title, the Emerson Wireless Field Network Message was delivered to customers in much of South Carolina. The team consists of Rosemount, Rosemount Analytical and Micro Motion direct sales staff and R.E. Mason Company Account Managers and Technical support personnel. So far David McLaurin, Kevin Arquitt, Kelly Watters, Don Blankenship, Sam Gooding, Brad Emry, Mitch Jones, Keith Merrell, and Larry Wolfe have made visits to fifteen customers in eleven locations. More than two hundred fifty customers have dined on
Read more: Wireless BlitzIf you Google “Proof of Concept”, here’s what you get…

If you visit our office in Charlotte, here’s what our “Proof of Concept” System looks like…

We assembled (and continue to reassemble) this system to allow us to discover how products (really) work and how products work together. We often do this as we implement a customer's configuration using a device which connects to DeltaV serially, or via a process bus (Foundation Fieldbus, Profibus DP, Device NET or Actuator Sensor - Interface Bus).
Hello, I’m Larry Wolfe, Director, Technology Deployment for REM Services, Inc. in Charlotte, North Carolina. I’ve been with the Robert E. Mason family of companies since March 1, 1985. I’ve worked with instrumentation and process controls most of my career (I started as a project engineer at Fiber Industries, Inc. Salisbury, NC in July of 1974, transferred to Charlotte into a corporate engineering group in September of 1976, was promoted to Engineering Group Leader in 1981, took an assignment as Instrumentation / Controls Lead on a major capital project in 1983).
For much of my time with the Robert E. Mason family of companies I have assisted customers in the specification, and selection of process control equipment. In many, many cases multiple systems
Read more: Why is Larry Wolfe Blogging?