At Kicher and Company, we provide services in the use of strain gages, pressure transducers and sensors for measuring mechanical strains to monitor force, torque, pressure, strain, displacement, and acceleration. Our experience has fostered the development of a unique capability to design, develop, manufacture, calibrate, and implement sensing devices and instrumentation for measuring mechanical strains.
Today, Kicher & Company provides a full service operation of product design, development and behavior exploration of aerospace, civil and mechanical devices and structures.
Today, Kicher & Company provides a full service operation of product design, development and behavior exploration of aerospace, civil and mechanical devices and structures.
Services
Kicher & Company began as the consulting practice of Dr. Thomas P. Kicher, Professor of Mechanical and Civil Engineering at the Case School of Engineering of Case Western Reserve University. From 1959 to 1972, the work concentrated on the stress analysis and prediction of mechanical behaviors of complex devices and structures for which analysis methods did not exist.
Kicher & Co has developed several products at the request of clients to satisfy their particular needs in their operations. Most of these devices involve the application of strain gages and many are produced in relatively small numbers to make critical measurements for their manufacturing or research activities.
Kicher & Co has a long history of consulting services, which focus primarily on mechanical devices and structural elements. Over the years, we have concentrated on the unusual rather than the routine. We have been particularly successful in the analysis, design and development of new products and the introduction of new technologies to old products.
The Pressure Transducer is designed to directly measure the dynamic pressure of gasses, fluids and slurries flowing through pipes and conduits without the use of a probe or any other obstruction to the flow. A short section of the line is replaced with a sensing component of the same cross-section that allows the free passage of the flow.
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