Zahn cup

A Zahn cup is a viscosity measurement device widely used in the paint industry. It is commonly a stainless steel cup with a tiny hole drilled in the center of the bottom of the cup. There is also a long handle attached to the sides. There are five cup specifications, labeled Zahn cup #x, where x is the number from one through five. Large number cup sizes are used when viscosity is high, while low number cup sizes are used when viscosity is low.

To determine the viscosity of a liquid, the cup is dipped and completely filled with the substance. After lifting the cup out of the substance the user measures the time until the liquid streaming out of it breaks up, this is the corresponding "efflux time".

On paint standard specifications, one denotes viscosity in this manner: efflux time, Zahn cup number.

Conversion

One can convert efflux time to kinematic viscosity by using an equation for each cup specification number, where t is the efflux time and ν is the kinematic viscosity in centistokes.

  • Zahn Cup #1: ν = 1.1(t − 29)
  • Zahn Cup #2: ν = 3.5(t − 14)
  • Zahn Cup #3: ν = 11.7(t − 7.5)
  • Zahn Cup #4: ν = 14.8(t − 5)
  • Zahn Cup #5: ν = 23t

Note the above equations are for a Brookfield series of Zahn cups.[1] Gardco signature Zahn cups and Gardco EZ Zahn cups use different conversions.[2] There seem to be no published conversions available for Weschler Instrument Zahn cups.

gollark: How can drones damage you?
gollark: Unless they just use the internet to download a big program for control. That would work fine.
gollark: Firstly, you can just pick up drones with screnches. Secondly, they can't actually fire weapons or anything as far as I know (maybe they could drop radioactive material, that would be !!FUN!!). Thirdly, I doubt the drones are very secure.
gollark: Anyway, don't worry much about killer drones, they make poor weapons.
gollark: I wonder if you could automatically try and trilaterate/triangulate radiation sources using a network of Geiger counters.

See also

References

  • Patton, Temple C. (1979). Paint Flow and Pigment Dispersion (2nd ed.). John Wiley & Sons Inc. ISBN 0-471-03272-7.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.