




💧 Flow with confidence, measure with precision!
The GREDIA 1" Water Flow Sensor is a compact, food-grade hall effect flowmeter designed for precise fluid measurement from 1 to 60 L/min. Featuring a robust 1-inch male thread, ±2% accuracy, and a wide DC 5-24V operating voltage, it ensures leak-proof, reliable performance across industrial, agricultural, and residential water flow applications.
| ASIN | B07MY7K249 |
| Batteries Required? | No |
| Batteries included? | No |
| Best Sellers Rank | 40,291 in Business, Industry & Science ( See Top 100 in Business, Industry & Science ) 23 in Flow Sensors |
| Customer Reviews | 4.3 4.3 out of 5 stars (185) |
| Date First Available | 3 April 2019 |
| Item Weight | 82 g |
| Item model number | GR-108 |
| Manufacturer | GREDIA |
| Material | Plastic |
| Package Dimensions | 11.61 x 10.11 x 5 cm; 82 g |
| Part number | GR-108 |
| Size | G1" male thread |
| Style | G1" male thread |
B**.
I've adapted this Gredia GR-201 1/2" flow sensor paired with a Digiten Flow Meter to monitor flow rate thru a UV sterilizer. The sterilizer I have requires a flow at 37 GPH optimum and 60 GPH max to be effective eradicating protozoa. Out of the box the pairing of the meter and sensor was way off reporting 16 GPH while a had a gate valve nearly closed. So to calibrate it, the meter has a K-factor value that has to be adjusted to the sensor you pair it with. The default was a K-factor value of 1.98. I did a Google Bard search for what the sensors K-factor should be... 11.45. I set the meters K-factor to that. It was much closer but not accurate. I adjusted my valve until the meter was reading 1 GPH of flow. I set up a bucket to divert the water exiting the system into so I could measure the amount dispensed in a minute. I recorded .453 gal. with the K- 11.45. Now a little math, divide the current K- (11.45) by the flow it produced (0.453) while the valve restricted flow with the meter reading 1 GPM. The resulting new K-factor of 25.27 worked precisely. Well, as precise as using a large measuring cup to measure the amount of water dispensed. I re-ran the test, I got 1 gallon at the 1 minute mark, 3 gal at 3 minutes. The one annoying thing about the meter is the backlit display goes dark after 15 seconds. Annoying during the calibration when your hands are busy turning on/off a pump and a timer. But in actual use I'll only be using this to set the gate valve position and the backlighting won't so much be an issue. I hope this helps those trying to get a more accurate reading.
-**)
Working good for 2 months.
G**T
Believe it or not I put these on my flexicoil sprayer the 65xl and was able to calibrate my nozzles to the new meter and it was pretty accurate I bought a bag of 20 so I had back up but the original lasted 2 years now pretty durable wasn’t expecting that
P**I
I was able to connect this sensor to Raypak Avia water heater and it is compatible. I use ABC adapters from Home Depot ex: "LESSO 2 In. ABS Female Adapter Hub x FIPT" or "LESSO ABS DWV 2" Union HxH" which makes it easy to detach if needed. So far I think it's a good product.
H**R
Works. Definitely seeing the +/- 5% difference in output. A few things I discovered: * The sensor needs at least 8V. I had a 9v power supply left over from some other equipment. However, a raspberry PI can only take 3.3V into its GPIO port. (and no pull-up resistor is needed) So I sent 8V into this sensor, and on the output pin I installed a 10k resistor tied to ground. This dropped the output voltage to around 3.7V. * I wanted to record data in gallons per hour. This is from my most recent calibration where I dumped water into a bucket marked off with quarters of a gallon on the side. total_gal = total_gal + 0.001115 # 897 pulses per gal = 0.001115 gal per pulse. This code runs whenever a change from high to low occurs on the output pin. flow = (count / 897.0)*3600 # pulses/897 is gal per sec. *3600 is gal per hour * the label faces down. There is a lot of play in the spindle inside. making the label face down puts the impeller more directly in line with the water flow * make sure you install it in the right direction. The arrow on the label was correct for me. * I used waterproof automotive plugs, sealed on the ends with caulk, since this thing will be outside measuring the irrigation water usage.
Trustpilot
2 months ago
2 months ago