1. n. [Well Workover and Intervention]
A device installed in a pump manifold or treating line to measure the fluid flow rate. Flowmeters can be used to measure the flow rates of liquid or gas and are available in various configurations and with differing operating principles.
See related terms: fluid flow, pump manifold
2. n. [Production Logging]
A device for measuring in-situ the velocity of fluid flow in a well, usually one completed for production or injection. The most common device is the spinner flowmeter, but torque flowmeters and crosscorrelation flowmeters also are used. In the 1940s and 1950s, various other surface-metering techniques were tried, but spinner flowmeters emerged as the most suitable for measuring downhole velocities. Spinner and torque flowmeters measure the average velocity of the fluids crossing the device, while crosscorrelation flowmeters measure the velocity of a particular phase. Although not normally called flowmeters, various other techniques measure flow velocity, for example water-flow logs, phase-velocity logs, distributed-temperature logs and even audio measurements.
See related terms: audio measurement, average velocity, crosscorrelation flowmeter, distributed temperature log, fluid flow, phase velocity log, production log, spinner flowmeter, torque flowmeter, water-flow log
3. n. [Production Testing]
An instrument that measures the flow rate of fluids through a pipeline. There are several types of flowmeters, including the differential-pressure meter, orifice meter, positive-displacement meter, vortex meter and multiphase meters.
See related terms: multiphase meter, orifice meter