Fuel and lubricant tank level measurement: ultrasonic or radar by vapor review
Diesel, heavy fuel oil, hydraulic oil, and lubricant storage tanks range from simple atmospheric day tanks to closed pressurized vessels. Technology selection depends on vapor pressure, temperature, tank geometry, and whether the tank is vented or sealed.

Confirm the site problem, the Volivue approach, and the expected operating benefit before final selection.
Overflow, dry-run, and inventory accuracy failures in fuel and lubricant tanks carry financial, safety, and environmental consequences that simple sight gauges or manual dipping cannot prevent reliably.
Review vapor pressure, temperature, tank type, and nozzle conditions to determine whether ultrasonic is adequate for the application or whether radar is required for the vapor and closed-tank conditions, then deliver level, volume, and alarms to the control system.
Right-sized level technology prevents overflow and dry-run events, provides accurate inventory data for dispatch and planning, and avoids over-engineering a vented day tank or under-specifying a closed fuel vessel.
Vapor pressure decides the technology, not habit
Fuel and lubricant storage spans calm atmospheric day tanks to sealed vessels with hydrocarbon vapor in the headspace. Diesel and lube oil at ambient temperature give off little vapor, so a vented day tank is often legitimate ultrasonic territory; heated heavy fuel oil, solvent-cut products and any closed or nitrogen-blanketed tank push vapor density up and degrade the acoustic echo.
This is where the combined family earns its place: the review weighs vapor pressure, temperature, tank construction and hazardous-area classification per tank, then assigns ultrasonic where the headspace is clean and radar where vapor, sealing or classification demands it. Mixing tiers on one site is normal — the costly mistakes are radar on every simple day tank, or ultrasonic pushed into vapor it cannot read through.

Overfill protection first, inventory second
Mount the sensor or transmitter on the top nozzle with the blind zone above the maximum safe fill line, and treat the high-level relay as the primary deliverable: a hard-wired overfill cut-off and alarm that depends on no network. For radar-tier tanks the antenna and process connection are chosen for the vapor and temperature, and hazardous-area documentation is reviewed per project rather than assumed.
The 4-20 mA or HART loop trends level for inventory, RS485/Modbus aggregates a depot of tanks into the Volivue dashboard, and volume conversion uses the tank geometry recorded during the review. A depot of mixed tanks is typically instrumented within days; the long-lead item is usually documentation and approvals, not the sensors themselves.

Four checks before planning fuel and lubricant tanks
- Classify each tank: vented or sealed, ambient or heated, and the medium vapor behavior at storage temperature.
- Check hazardous-area classification early — it constrains technology and documentation more than range does.
- Set the overfill chain first: blind-zone margin, the high-level relay set point and the hard-wired trip path.
- Record tank geometry or strapping data so level converts to a volume figure that dispatch can actually use.
Diesel hardly fumes — why would any diesel tank need radar?
At ambient temperature in a vented tank, diesel is usually fine for ultrasonic. The radar cases are structural: a sealed or blanketed tank, a heated tank where vapor and temperature gradients bend the acoustic path, or a classified zone whose documentation requirements the project review flags. The medium answers only half the question; the tank answers the other half.
Can the high-level alarm trip the filling pump directly, without the PLC?
Yes — the relay output is designed for exactly that. Wire it into the pump contactor or shutoff-valve circuit so overfill protection works even if the PLC or network is down, then let the 4-20 mA trend feed the control system for normal operation. Keep test records: overfill loops should be exercised on a schedule.
Five checks that decide ultrasonic or radar, mounting, conversion, and output scope.
Collect tank drawings and geometry
Confirm tank height, diameter, shape, nozzle size, mounting position, dead zone, and internal obstacles before any range claim.
Review medium and process conditions
Medium name, vapor, foam, turbulence, corrosion, temperature, pressure, and hazardous area decide whether ultrasonic or radar is reliable.
Select technology and package
Choose ultrasonic or radar, range, wetted material, process connection, seal, protection class, and accessories from the reviewed conditions.
Map usable outputs
Define 4-20mA, HART, relay, optional RS485/Modbus, PLC, dashboard, alarm, trend, or volume fields so the signal is useful after installation.
Commission and validate
Check scaling, empty/full references, tank conversion, alarm points, and trend behavior with site data.
Handover and remote support
Confirm documentation, operator training, spare parts, and a remote support path so the team can maintain scaling, alarms, and integration after commissioning.
Selection questions for engineers, procurement teams, and site maintenance.
When should radar be selected instead of ultrasonic?
Use radar when vapor, foam, temperature swings, pressure, corrosion, or high reliability requirements make ultrasonic echo unstable. Ultrasonic stays a good fit for clean, non-pressurized, cost-sensitive tanks.
Does the system measure weight?
No. It measures liquid level. Volume or percent fill is calculated from tank geometry or a strapping table; mass needs documented density assumptions.
Can it calculate tank volume?
Yes. Volume can be calculated when tank geometry, measurement range, and a strapping table or dimensions are available.
What media can it handle?
Water, wastewater, fuel, lubricants, chemicals, solvents, additives, and food-grade liquids, with technology and wetted material confirmed by review.
Can it connect to PLC or SCADA?
Yes, the project scope can include 4-20mA, HART, relay, optional RS485/Modbus, gateway, dashboard, or API integration.
Do you support hazardous area projects?
We can review hazardous-area requirements, but no ATEX, IECEx, SIL, or local compliance claim is made without verified product data and documentation.
What information should we send first?
Send the tank drawing, medium name, height, nozzle details, temperature, pressure, vapor or foam condition, required outputs, and site conditions.
What are the typical lead time and after-sales support?
Lead time depends on technology, range, wetted material, and order quantity, and is confirmed after application review. After-sales support covers documentation, commissioning guidance, spare parts, and remote help.
Send tank drawings, medium, temperature, and output target.
Share tank drawings, medium name, height, nozzle details, temperature, pressure, vapor or foam condition, output target, country or region, and hazardous-area need if any.