ARTICLES
"Water Meter Connections-
They Can Drive You Nuts!"
by Eric Corey

I may be a third generation meter
man but small water meter connection sizing has made me question my heritage.
Why does a 1 meter not have 1 pipe
thread on the threaded end? Why do 1.5-2 meters have female threads when
their smaller cousins have male thread? For that matter, why do 1.5 & 2
meters have oval flanges and 3 and above have round flanges? Now I know this
will get me in real trouble, but why do meters being installed on Ύ pipe and
1 pipe say 5/8 and Ύ respectively on the dial faces? What are all the
color coding of odometer dials about and why are their so many different
variants of body, housing and bottom plate materials?
Trying not to look dumb, I have
researched some of these questions and thought I would share them with you,
just in case you wanted to know the answers as well.
Water Meter Connections:
Instead of taking a sleeping pill
you are welcome to read the American Waterworks Association standards C700 or
C708 or their M-5 manual on water meter installation but here it is in
nutshell. Water Meter body sizing nomenclature historically lists the
measuring chamber and internal diameter/bore size as the first number and the
pipe size the meter is installed on, as the second number in the sizing.
For instance a 5/8x3/4 meter has a 5/8 measuring chamber and 5/8 bore size
and is installed on a Ύ pipe.
Click here to view a chart with more details.
While all this may seem confusing,
through personal experience a ½ external straight thread will take a Ύ
internal pipe thread connection. Ύ external straight thread will take a 1
internal pipe thread connection and 1 external straight thread will take a
1.5 internal pipe thread connection. If you dont believe me you can make a
Coupling tower of a ½,3/4 and 1 coupling sets. I find this useful when I
have recently been trying to explain this issue to customers.
As you note from the chart 1.5 and
2 water meters are available in both internal pipe thread and two bolt oval
flanged versions. Due to the weight of these meters the internal pipe thread
is thought to be more stable on the pipe and the 2 bolt oval flange is for
ease of retrofit installation.
Another question frequently asked is
why does the meter register have 5/8 printed on it for a 5/8x3/4 meter
going on a Ύ pipe. The reason for this is that the 5/8x1/2 meter and the
5/8x3/4 meter have the same measuring chamber and use the same register.
Remember from our earlier discussion that the first number in the sizing
sequence is also the measuring chamber size. This also applies to the Ύx1
meter that is installed on a 1 pipe but says Ύ on the register face.
Register Dial Faces:I think
that reading water meter dial faces is simple if you forget everything except
the odometer. You read the odometer left to right and what you see is what
you get. On a 5/8x3/4 water meter for example 1234560 is 1,234,560 gallons
on a US Gallons register. Most Utilities bill in 1000 gallon increments and
the odometers reflect this by having the far left wheels in white with black
print representing thousands, ten thousand, hundred thousand and millions of
gallons. The two dials on the right and the fixed zero are black wheels with
white print which represent non-billable units or hundreds, tens and ones.
The fixed zero is represented by a meter test sweep hand on the register. In
our previous example if the reading was 1234560 and the sweep hand was on the
3, the actual meter reading would be 1,234,563 US Gallons. You will
find two fixed zeros on 1 meters and a one hundred gallon sweep hand. This
is to accommodate larger volumes of water so the odometer can go to
100,000,000 gallons before turning over instead of 10,000,000 gallons on the
smaller meter.
There are some other important
features of the register that may help you:
Leak detector This is a white or
black triangle attached to the center of the sweep hand and goes around on a
one to one ratio with the measuring chamber. This is used to identify that
the oscillating piston in the measuring chamber is moving. Most utilities
have customers turn off all the water in their homes and then check the leak
detector to see if the customer has a leak on their side of the meter.
Manufacturing date code The
register should have an imprinted month and year date on the dial face, which
is the date of Manufacture that the Company uses to determine age of the meter
and warranties.
Meter information The meter model
number, register part number, chamber size (as previously explained),
Calibration (i.e. US Gallon, Cubic Feet, M3) are also displayed on the meter.
Elster AMCO meters also have a 2P or 4P on the register. This is the number
of poles the register magnet has and is used to make sure the register magnet
and chamber magnet match.
Water Meter Trim Variants:
The Elster AMCO 5/8x3/4 C700 water
meter can be ordered in over 2000 different variants. Many of the variants
available today on residential water meters come from customer requests from
decades ago. Manufacturers quality processes and materials have improved so
much that most customers can use the standard meter configuration with no
problems. The Standard meter consists of a bronze case, glass lens register
and polymer register housing, lid and bottom plate. I wanted to understand
why all the variants existed so I asked some questions. Here are the
answers:
Main Case The main cases are
available in traditional bronze alloy, low lead bronze and polymer case ( in
some sizes). Traditional Alloy and Low Lead main cases are a customer
requirement based legislation they must follow, but Polymer meters were
popular in the early eighties and have lost favor with most customers. They
are still popular in industrial applications especially where bronze is not
the best material.
Register material While meters are
available with polymer and glass lens we only sell glass lens meters in
Florida for pit applications. Polymer lens meters can be installed in
basements in the North inside.
Register Housing material Register
Housings are available in polymer and bronze. Some customers require bronze
housing for reasons of length of service but most utilities today except
polymer housing as the polymer materials have improved and are sufficient for
the service requirements.
Bottom Plate materials - Bottom
plates are available in polymer, bronze and cast iron. polymer and bronze
bottom plates fall in the same category as housing materials but the cast iron
bottoms are traditionally used in the north for frost protection. The cast
iron bottom is designed to fracture when the meter freezes to prevent damage
to internal parts of the meters. Florida meter pit set applications can use
cast iron bottom plates but polymer is the standard.
I hope this information has cleared
up some of the oddities of residential water meter connection sizing and helps
you explain these things to your customers.
Note: I would like to thank the
Second Generation meter man John Corey for his input and assistance with
the editing of this article.
Eric Corey is Avanti's
South Florida Sales Representative. Eric is the son of John Corey,
Avanti's metering systems manager who has been in the industry for 30 years,
and grandson of James Corey , founder of Corad meters.
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