Setec Astronomy said:
Are these ultrasonic, rather than eddy current? ....
Yes, the PosiTector 200 and 100 series Coating Thickness Gages are ultrasonic.
MuttGrunt said:
...A Defelsko representative told me that while it can still be used, one issue likely to come up is you won't get readings aside from the clear-coat and everything else. ...
I believe what he told you is an oversimplification.
MuttGrunt said:
.... In short: you'll get a reading of the clear-coat, but the base coat, primer-sealer, primer-surfacer, and E-coat/self-etching primer will likely be grouped together as there isn't a big enough difference in the density in those layers for the tool to tell a difference in them.
This will help to show you that even though it seemed to read differently, you're clear-coat is, like others pointed out, still going to be the thickest layer. Everything other than the clear was just lumped together....
This may be the core of that oversimplification.
It is certainly true that an ultrasonic gage may or may not be able to differentiate between layers. It depends on how much of an “echo” is returned from the material boundary and the sensitivity of the detection method.
The quality of the echo is dependent on the how closely the materials are matched in “characteristic impedance,” which is a function of a material’s density and the speed of wave travel through it. (When the material is air, it may be called “acoustic impedance.”)
The more closely two materials’ impedances match, the less echo, because sound propagates through them in the same way. The greater the difference between their impedances, the larger the echo.
Since different layers of an automotive coating system can have rather similar chemical/physical composition there may sometimes be little difference between two layers’ impedances. So there may be little echo. But it’s really dependent on the specific combination.
There’s no reason an ultrasonic won’t work on metal substrates. They have their own characteristic impedance like any other material. In fact, ultrasonic measurement is often used for checking pipe wall thickness. But I don’t doubt that magnetic and eddy current techniques are more accurate on metal substrates.
Any sort of wave propagation has some equivalent to characteristic impedance. In the field radio wave transmission it’s also called characteristic impedance. In the field of optics and light transmission, it’s called index of refraction.
In open space, the radio wave equivalent of what the PosiTector does is called RADAR. For enclosed cables, the radio wave equivalent is called a Time Domain Reflectometer. The equivalent machine for fiber optic cables is also called a Time Domain Reflectometer. The equivalent in water is called SONAR.
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