Te fare » Flange-Mount Optical Liquid Level Sensor

Flange-Mount Optical Liquid Level Sensor

Me 20, 2026

HojellyTek manufactures flange-mounted optical liquid level sensors in Shenzhen for OEM/ODM projects, te feia hamani tauihaa, and sensor distributors needing custom mounting geometry, te mau materia rari, Te mau ma'itiraa no te ohipa, and export-ready support for US, MATOU, and India markets.

Flange-Mounted Sensor Capabilities

A flange-mounted optical level switch is normally selected when the tank wall cannot reliably hold a threaded sensor. Instead of cutting a threaded port, the tank uses a clearance hole and a flange face. The flange holds the sensor body against the outside or inside surface while a gasket or O-ring creates the seal.

For buyers comparing mounting types, our standard matini hi'opo'a range can be configured around tank material, sensing height, te avei'a no te faaru'eraa i te, and electrical output. For projects that already have a metal boss or thick threaded port, a 1/4 NPT threaded option may be more suitable. For corrosive media, food equipment, Te mau faanahoraa mori arahu, or stainless tanks, a 316 tino stainless can be reviewed during material selection.

Typical customization areas include:

  • Round, Te mau mana'o tauturu no te, or custom flange shapes
  • Two-hole, three-hole, four-hole, or customer-defined bolt patterns
  • Flat gasket or O-ring sealing design
  • Plastique, PTFE, 316 auri auri, or glass-contact material options
  • NPN, PNP, AITA, NC, or analog output configuration where required
  • Te niuniu, tu'atiraa, te roa o te niuniu, and exit direction
  • Side-wall, Raro, top-down, or equipment-panel mounting

Mounting Problem This Design Solves

The main reason to choose a flange-mounted optical liquid level sensor is not sensing theory; it is installation reliability. Many tanks are made from thin plastic, stainless sheet, acrylique, aluminum, or molded housings where internal threads are weak, Te mau mana'o tauturu no te, or impossible to machine. If a threaded sensor is forced into a thin wall, the installer may face poor sealing, wall cracking, thread stripping, sensor tilt, or inconsistent sensing height.

A flange mount spreads the mechanical load across a wider surface. The tank hole provides clearance for the sensing tip, while the flange controls alignment and compression. This makes the design useful for thin-wall reservoirs, te mau vairaa pape, Te mau farii pape faatoetoe, farii hinu, battery equipment, cleaning equipment, te mau matini na'ina'i, and OEM modules where tapping is not practical.

The flange also gives the buyer better control over repeat assembly. In production, operators can drill or mold the same hole pattern, place the gasket, insert the sensor, tighten the screws or nut, and confirm the sensing point height. This is easier to standardize than hand-tapping a thin tank wall.

Flange Size and Pattern Selection

The flange must match three things: the tank wall, the sealing surface, and the sensing location. A small flange saves space, but it provides less gasket area. A larger flange gives better sealing support, but it needs more room on the tank wall. The correct choice depends on tank thickness, available flat area, Te mau mana'o tauturu no te, huru pape, and assembly method.

For compact tanks, a mini round flange may be enough if the wall is flat and the liquid pressure is low. For equipment panels or molded reservoirs, a two-hole or four-hole flange can prevent rotation during cable handling. For higher vibration or larger tanks, a wider flange face and stronger screw pattern usually gives better stability.

The flange drawing should define the sensor center hole, flange outside diameter, bolt hole quantity, bolt circle or spacing, screw size, gasket contact area, and cable exit clearance. If the tank already has a hole pattern, our team can review the drawing and adapt the flange design instead of forcing the buyer to redesign the tank.

Flange Dimension Table for RFQ Review

Flange ItemEaha te haapapûNo te aha mea faufaa ' i
Flange shapeRound, Te mau mana'o tauturu no te, oval, or custom profileControls available sealing area and tank-wall fit
Center clearance holeHole for the sensing tip and sensor bodyPrevents rubbing, tilt, or incorrect insertion depth
Flange outside sizeMaximum space allowed on the tank wallEnsures the flange does not hit ribs, Te mau poro, welds, or nearby parts
Bolt patternTwo-hole, three-hole, four-hole, or custom spacingPrevents rotation and controls gasket compression
Bolt hole sizeMatched to screw or fastener choiceAvoids loose mounting or forced assembly
Gasket seatFlat gasket face or O-ring grooveDetermines sealing method and compression control
Sensor projectionDistance from flange face to sensing pointSets the liquid level switching height
Cable exit directionAfaro, side exit, or customer-definedAvoids cable bending against the tank or enclosure
Wall thickness rangeConfirmed from tank drawing or samplePrevents poor clamping, insufficient engagement, or sensor misalignment
Te mau mana'o tauturu no teTe pae, Raro, i ni'a, or angled mountAffects drainage, residue buildup, and service access

Gasket and O-Ring Sealing Options

A flange mount is only reliable if the seal is matched to the tank surface and liquid. Flat gaskets are useful when the tank wall has a broad, smooth contact area. O-rings are often preferred when the flange has a controlled groove and the design requires repeatable compression.

Seal material should be chosen by the liquid, rave'a tamâraa, Faito anuvera, e te mau tauihaa o te pereoo auri. Silicone is often considered for water and general equipment sealing. FKM is commonly selected for oil, Te mau mana'o tauturu no te, and higher chemical resistance requirements. EPDM may be reviewed for water-based systems. PTFE-related sealing solutions may be considered where chemical compatibility is more important than elastic compression.

The real failure modes are usually simple: the gasket is too hard, the wall is not flat, the screws are tightened unevenly, the O-ring groove is not controlled, or the sensor is mounted on a curved tank section without enough sealing area. For OEM work, the safest approach is to review the tank drawing, vahi tapiri, screw layout, and liquid compatibility before sample production.

Wall Thickness and Orientation Guidelines

For thin-wall tanks, the sensor should be mounted where the wall is flat and strong enough to hold compression. If the wall flexes when the screws are tightened, the seal may loosen over time. If the wall is too thick for the selected sensor projection, the sensing point may not sit at the required level inside the tank.

Side-wall mounting is common for high/low level detection because it sets a clear switching height. Bottom mounting can work for leak detection or minimum-level monitoring, but it requires stronger sealing review because liquid pressure and residue may affect the mounting area. Top-down mounting can be used when the tank wall does not allow side drilling, but the projection length and cable routing must be checked carefully.

Avoid placing the flange on curved corners, weld seams, ribbed plastic, uneven molded surfaces, or areas where tools cannot tighten the fasteners evenly. A flange-mounted sensor is a mechanical assembly first; the sensing performance depends heavily on stable installation.

5-Step OEM/ODM Process

  1. Uiuiraa — Send the tank drawing, huru pape, Te avei'a no te haamauraa, target level height, and required output.
  2. Te mau faataaraa e te faatanoraa — We confirm flange shape, bolt pattern, gasket/O-ring design, te mau materia rari, niuniu niuniu, and electrical output.
  3. Hi'oraa — A sample can be prepared for tank fitting, hi'opo'araa i te taatiraa, and electrical validation.
  4. Te hamaniraa e te QC — The factory checks assembly consistency, Te mau mana'o tauturu no te, output function, and appearance before shipment.
  5. Te haponoraa — Orders are packed for export, with communication by WhatsApp or email for project updates.

Te mau titauraa no te haapapû hou a poro'i ai

Before ordering a flange-mount optical liquid level sensor, confirm these details:

  • Te mau tauihaa o te vairaa e te meumeu o te papa'i
  • Flat mounting surface size
  • Required sensing height from the tank bottom
  • Hole diameter or existing tank cutout
  • Bolt pattern or available screw locations
  • Huru pape: pape, hinu, pape toetoe, Te mau mana'o tauturu no te, Te mau mana'o tauturu no te, e aore râ, te pape tamâ
  • Seal preference: flat gasket or O-ring
  • Wetted body material: PSU, PTFE, 316 auri auri, or glass contact design
  • Te huru o te ohipa: NPN, PNP, No/NC, e aore râ, te titauraa analog
  • Te uira e titauhia e te iri hi'opo'araa
  • Te avei'a no te tamauraa: side-wall, Raro, top-down, e aore râ, i te poro
  • Te roa o te niuniu, tu'atiraa, and cable exit direction
  • Need for OEM branding, drawing control, or custom packaging

For buyers who need a complete selectable product reference, te tao'a no te hi'opo'araa i te faito hi'o page can be used as a starting point before flange-specific customization.

Flange Mount vs Threaded Mount

Vahi ma'itiraaFlange Mount SensorThreaded Sensor
Best tank typeThin-wall or non-threaded tankThick wall, boss, or threaded port
Installation methodClearance hole plus flange sealThreaded hole or threaded fitting
Sealing methodGasket or O-ring under flangeThread sealant, O-ring, or thread design
Rotation controlBolt pattern can prevent twistingSensor may rotate during tightening
OEM repeatabilityGood for molded or drilled patternsGood when threaded inserts are controlled
Modification requiredHole and screw patternThreaded port or tapping process
Te faaohiparaa maitai roa a'ePlastic reservoirs, Te mau pǔp�, thin metal tanksMachined metal tanks or pipe fittings

No te aha e rave ai i te ohipa e HojellyTek

HojellyTek o te hoê ïa taiete hamani i te mau matini hi'o e te faito pape i Shenzhen e te R i roto i te fare&D and OEM/ODM support. Our team focuses on photoelectric optical sensing products, custom mounting structures, wetted-material selection, and export projects for equipment manufacturers and distributors.

For connected systems, Tuya/Smart Life integration can also be discussed where the project requires sensor data to work with smart monitoring hardware. For industrial and OEM buyers, we support drawing review, hi'oraa haapapûraa, and configuration discussions before production.

FAQ

Can a flange mount optical liquid level sensor be installed without tapping internal threads?

E. A flange mount optical liquid level sensor is designed for tanks where tapping internal threads is difficult or unreliable. The tank normally uses a clearance hole, a flange face, and a gasket or O-ring seal.

What flange pattern should I choose?

Choose based on tank space, sealing area, and anti-rotation needs. Two-hole patterns suit compact designs, while three-hole or four-hole patterns give stronger alignment and more even gasket compression.

Should I use a gasket or an O-ring?

Use a flat gasket for broad flat surfaces and an O-ring when the flange can include a controlled groove. The seal material should match the liquid, anuvera, rave'a tamâraa, e te mau tauihaa o te pereoo auri.

Can the sensor be mounted on a curved tank wall?

It is not recommended unless the flange and gasket are designed for that surface. A flat mounting area gives better compression and lower leakage risk.

Can I use flange mounting for oil or coolant tanks?

E, but the wetted materials and seal material must be checked. For oil, pape toetoe, Te mau mana'o tauturu no te, e aore râ, te tahi atu mau mea, share the liquid details so the factory can review body material and gasket compatibility.

What information should I send for a quotation?

Send the tank drawing or photo, meumeu o te papa'i, hole size, Arata'iraa no te tamauraa, sensing height, huru pape, titauraa no te ohipa, Te roa o te niuniu, and expected order use. Our team can then recommend a suitable flange-mounted design.

A ani i te hoê faahitiraa parau

Need a flange-mounted optical level sensor for a thin-wall or non-threaded tank? Contact HojellyTek by WhatsApp or email with your tank drawing, huru pape, Te avei'a no te haamauraa, e te titauraa no te ohipa. Our team will review the flange size, Rave'a no te taati, Ma'itiraa materia, and sample configuration for your project.