The Ultrasonic Thickness Gauge works by sending a short pulse of high frequency sound through the material being measured. The gauge then measures the time taken for an echo to be received from the back wall. With this data, the thickness of the material is determined.
Single echo technology only reads the time taken for one back wall echo to pass through both the material under test AND its surface coating. This gives an apparent material thickness which is wrong, because the sound has passed through the surface coating as well. Coatings such as paint, epoxy or bitumen have a velocity of sound which is around one third that of steel. This gives rise to a vastly greater material thickness reading than is really the case, because the surface coating is included.
With MULTIPLE ECHO, measurements of the time delay between any three consecutive back wall echoes are taken. This means the coating thickness – up to 6 mm (and up to 20 mm using our 'Deep Coat' mode) – is completely ignored. The gauge does not need to be zeroed or calibrated at switch on. And because these time delays must match before a measurement is displayed, the gauge has automatically verified that the reading given is a TRUE MEASUREMENT.
An Ultrasonic Thickness Gauge must be calibrated to the velocity of sound of the material it is measuring.
Coatings such as paint, epoxy or bitumen have a velocity of sound which is around one third that of steel.