Meter proving is the process of comparing an oil flowmeter's actual measurement output against a known, certified reference volume to determine the meter's accuracy and calculate its meter factor (or K-factor). This field procedure is essential in custody transfer applications where the accuracy of oil measurements has direct financial implications. Unlike laboratory calibration, which is performed on a bench with a test fluid, proving is typically done in place using the actual process fluid and actual operating conditions, making it a more representative test of the meter's real-world performance.
The most common proving methods used for oil flowmeters are the pipe prover, the compact prover, and the master meter prover. A pipe prover is a precisely calibrated, bidirectional or unidirectional cylinder with a displacer (sphere or piston) that is swept back and forth by the flowing oil. As the displacer passes two detectors, it triggers the start and stop of a volume count in the meter being proved. The known volume between the detectors (the base volume of the prover) is compared against the meter's accumulated reading to calculate the meter factor. Compact provers perform the same function in a much smaller volume, completing the proving cycle faster. Master meter provers use a reference meter of known accuracy to compare against the meter under test.
The meter factor derived from proving represents the ratio between the actual volume delivered and the volume indicated by the meter. A meter factor of exactly 1.0000 means the meter is reading perfectly; a factor above or below indicates over- or under-reading. The meter factor is applied by the flow computer to correct all subsequent measurements until the next proving. Most custody transfer standards require proving to be performed at scheduled intervals (typically quarterly or after any significant maintenance event) and whenever there is reason to doubt the meter's accuracy. Proper proving procedures, certified provers, and trained proving technicians are essential investments for any organization operating custody transfer oil metering systems.