In the world of process control—where a single wandering thermocouple or a drifting pressure transmitter can mean millions in lost product or a catastrophic safety failure—engineers don't rely on guesswork. They rely on the “bibles” of the trade. For over five decades, one such text has occupied the greasy, annotated shelf space just above the engineering workstation: Process/Industrial Instruments and Controls Handbook .
When a veteran wonders, “Has anyone really used a radar level transmitter on polymer pellets with dust?” the handbook says yes, and gives the dielectric constant range and the antenna fouling interval. In the world of process control—where a single
Find this book at ISA.org, Amazon, or your favorite technical book retailer. In the world of process control—where a single
Weaknesses