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Title: Runlwlcwlalo Ur Liquid Lukdint,
Author: Chuck Allen
Source: 1988 International School of Hydrocarbon Measurement
Year Published: 1988
Abstract: Liquid turbine meters have been used to measure the flow of liquids in a pipe for over a hundred years. The first designs, of course, were not as precise as the meters that are in use today. In fact, if there had not been a need by the early aerospace industry to develop meters to accurately measure exotic jet fuels and liquid rocket fuels in the 1950s, the evolution of the meter into the present configurations may not have happened. The acceptance of liquid turbine meters was officially made by the petroleum industry in 1970 when the American Petroleum Institute (API) adopted Standard 2534, Measurement of Liquid Hydrocarbons by Turbine Meter Systems. In 1976, the API dedicated Chapter 5, Section 3 of the Manual of Petroleum Measurement Standards to turbine meters. These standards outline the use of the turbine meter for custody transfer of a variety of hydrocarbon liquid




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