Manufacturer: Cannon Instrument
Brand: CANNON Instrument
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The Cannon ZCAC-RO-3 Zeitfuchs cross-arm viscometer has a permanently attached 51mm diameter round metal holder and a 6.0 to 30 centistokes (cSt) viscosity measuring range. It is suitable for the measurement of either transparent or opaque Newtonian fluids such as fuels and lubricants. It uses a viscometer constant of 0.03 centistokes per second (cSt/s) for calculating kinematic viscosity of sample sizes as small as 1.0mL. The ZCAC-RO-series size 3 viscometer uses a 230mm depth water bath (not included) for temperature-control testing and a vacuum (not included) to draw a sample up for timed testing between two sets of printed marks. It includes an ASTM International certificate of calibration. This calibrated capillary-style viscometer meets the ASTM International D446 standard for viscometers and the D445 standard for testing viscosity. A viscometer, also called a viscosimeter, is an instrument used to measure the friction caused by the relative motion of a Newtonian fluid and a known surface, and is usually expressed in units of poise (P), centipoise (cP), pascal seconds (Pa s), and millipascal seconds (mPa s). Viscometers have several forms, including but not limited to falling ball, rotational, vibrating, capillary, funnel, and bubble. A falling ball viscometer measures the time it takes for a ball of known diameter and density to fall through fluid in a cylinder of known diameter. A rotational viscometer measures the force required to stir a fluid. A vibrating viscometer measures the power input necessary to keep the oscillator vibrating at constant amplitude while immersed in a fluid. A capillary viscometer has a narrow-bore vertical section with two printed marks that measure time required for a known volume of fluid to fall a known distance. A funnel viscometer, such as a Ford, Zahn, or Shell cup, measures the time it takes a known volume of fluid to flow from the base of a cone through a short tube. A bubble viscometer measures the time required for an air bubble to rise through a fluid. Viscosity meas...