In oil measurement, two fundamental quantities are derived from flowmeter data: flow rate and totalized volume (also called totalizer or accumulated volume). Flow rate represents the instantaneous rate at which oil is passing through the meter at any given moment, expressed in volumetric units per unit of time (e.g., L/min, m³/h, GPM) or mass units per unit of time (e.g., kg/min, t/h). Totalized volume, by contrast, is the cumulative amount of oil that has passed through the meter over a defined period, obtained by integrating the flow rate over time, expressed in liters, gallons, barrels, or metric tons.
Both quantities serve important and distinct purposes in oil operations. Flow rate is the primary variable for process control—it tells operators whether the system is running at the intended throughput and enables automatic control loops to maintain the desired flow by adjusting pumps and control valves. Totalizer readings, on the other hand, are the primary basis for commercial oil transactions, inventory management, and tax calculations. In custody transfer applications, the totalizer reading at the end of a batch or delivery period—corrected to standard temperature and pressure conditions—is the quantity that determines the invoice amount and the tax liability.
Modern flow computers and electronic registers display both instantaneous flow rate and accumulated totals simultaneously, providing operators with a comprehensive picture of the metering system's performance. Totalized volumes are typically stored in non-volatile memory that is preserved even if power is lost, ensuring that no transaction data is ever lost due to a power outage. For audit and verification purposes, the flow computer logs historical totalizer readings at regular intervals and records them with timestamps, enabling reviewers to reconstruct the complete flow history for any period. Understanding the difference between flow rate and totalized volume—and ensuring that both are being measured and reported correctly—is a fundamental requirement for anyone responsible for oil metering operations.