Conveyor Belt Scales

Scales are gravimetric devices. In other words they are devices that measure the force that gravity exerts on mass. Scales can be classified as two types: differential and integral weighing devices.

 

Differential Weighing Devices

Differential weighing devices are the most common. You begin at one

weight on a scale and then add or subtract weight to give you the

difference between the beginning and ending reading. For example, a

truck scale starts at one reading, generally zero, and then goes

to a different weight reading when you drive a truck onto the scale

platform. The difference between the two readings is the weight of the truck.

Truck scales, rail scales, platform scales, package scales, postal scales,

counting scales, etc. all operate on this principle.

 

Batching scales weigh ingredients into a weigh hopper on a differential

basis, one ingredient at a time. Bulk weighers weigh and dump into and

out of a bulk material weigh hopper to record the high weight, the low weight,

and the difference which is the total weight transferred of bulk materials.

Loss-in-weight feeders use a feeding device to empty a weigh hopper

at a controlled rate using the rate of change of weight

(the differential weight change) as the measuring element.

 

Integrating Weighing Devices

Integrating weighing devices are the second category of scales.

Conveyor belts scales are integrating weighing devices that use

a simple integral calculus summation process to measure a conveyed

quantity of material. Two variables are involved: weight and speed.

A weight function measures the weight of a small section of a conveyor.

The gross weight on the scale is the weight of the belt, the belt conveyor

idler and the material on the belt. The net weight of material only is the

gross weight less the weight of the supported section of the belt and the scale idler.

The speed function is the second variable to be measured. Most modern speed

sensors are rotary digital pulse generators. These can be optical, magnetic or

other on/off sensing units. They are mounted on a pulley or wheel that rotates

as the belt moves. They generate an on/off signal as they move which is directly

proportional to the distance the belt moves and the speed of the belt.

 

Types of Belt Scale Weighing Technologies

Many different types of weighing technologies have been used over the

years for conveyor belt scales. The first belt scales used mechanical

integrators. The speed of the belt drives a disk. A ball or another disk

rolls on this disk at right angles to the speed disk. The position of the ball

or second disk is controlled by the weight on the scale. If the ball is in the

centre of the speed disk, it does not rotate at all. As the ball is moved to

the outside, it rotates faster and faster. The speed of the ball is a mechanical

multiple of the speed of disk and the position of the ball on the disk. The

ball is connected to a shaft that drives a totalizer. The speed of this shaft

is the rate.

 

Another method of determining the load on a conveyor belt was to use

a nuclear source on one side of the belt and a detector on the other side.

The more material that is on the belt, the less radiation is detected.

You get an inversely proportional signal of absorbing mass on the belt.

Using this along with belt speed you could make a belt scale.

These were never very wide spread in actual use.

 

LVDT’s (linear variable differential transformers) are position sensing

devices that have been used in conjunction with spring mechanisms

to measure belt weight. They are non-contacting sensors and

generally have spring mechanisms that are rugged in nature which gives

them very good overload characteristics. On the down side,  

they can exhibit problems with thermal effects on the mechanical springs.

These effects can be both on zero because of thermal expansion

and on the span due to modulus of elasticity changes.

 

Strain gage load cells are commonly used in scales today.

Many have been adapted to mechanical lever scales using a

lever system to sum forces at a single point where a load cell is used

to read the resultant force electronically at this point. These scales were

Common for retrofit installations on truck scales for example. Also,

Strain gage load cells were initially very expensive and limited to in-line

Tension and compression forces. This made mechanical hybrid load cell

mechanisms popular. Some belt scales are made with this technology

today, but their use is declining.

 

Today, most scales are full strain gage suspension types. They use little

or no mechanical mechanisms and the load platform is directly supported

by the load cell system. Most new conveyor belt scales use this

technology. Overload stops are built into the load cell mounting systems

to make them rugged and reliable. Also, they are simple in their overall

design. Single point suspension load cell designs allow for off-centre loading.

This also compensates for any extraneous side loading that could effect

 the true weight component of the belt load forces that we are measuring.

 

There are advantages and disadvantages when considering conveyor

belt scales. As an integrating device, a conveyor belt scale

is a very compact device that fits into conveyor systems.

The scale handles large quantities of raw materials on a continuous basis.

 It does not require large batch hoppers, truck scales or

rail scales. It can handle rates that make the application of differential

scales almost impractical. Loading and unloading ships is one example.

 

Belt scales have their weak points. First, belt scales can run for extended

periods of time without returning to zero. This means that any build-up

On the scale that affects the zero will not be detected until the scale is run

Empty. A zero error is not a one-time error. This error is continuously

Added along with the weight of actual material. Also, extraneous forces

such as wind loading, changing belt tension, excessive vibration, and

mechanical interference with the scale can cause errors in the weighing

system. The scale does not know the difference between the forces

from actual material we are trying to weigh and the forces from external

noise. Although this is true of all scales, the ratio of signal to noise is

much better on differential weighing devices than on integrating devices.

Integrating belt scales are weighing a small portion of weight on a

continuous basis and external noise can be significant. Care must be

taken to correctly install a belt scale and to protect it from external influences.

 

About the author: 

Working on conveyor projects.