The Laureate Series Programmable Panel Meters feature a modular design, offering maximum flexibility at a minimal cost. All boards are isolated from meter and power grounds. The base configuration for the panel meters, digital counter, or digital timer consists of a main module (with computer and plug-in display boards), a power supply board (Vac or Vdc), and a signal conditioner board. Optional plug-in boards include setpoint controller boards, analog output boards, and digital interface boards. Read more...

Industrial Analog Panel Meters

DC Voltage and Current Input Signal

Accuracy of 0.01% of reading ± 2 counts. High read rates at up to 60 or 50 conversions per second.

    $313.00

    Load Cell Strain Gauge and Microvolt

    Accuracy of 0.01% of reading ± 2 counts. High read rates at up to 60 or 50 conversions per second.

      $396.00

      Scale Meter for Weighing

      Accuracy of 0.01% of reading ± 2 counts. High read rates at up to 60 or 50 conversions per second.

        $353.00

        Process and Ratiometric 

        Accuracy of 0.01% of reading ± 2 counts. High read rates at up to 60 or 50 conversions per second.

          $313.00

          True RMS AC Voltage and Current 

          Accuracy of 0.01% of reading ± 2 counts. High read rates at up to 60 or 50 conversions per second.

            $367.00

            Thermocouple Temperature 

            Accuracy of 0.01% of reading ± 2 counts. High read rates at up to 60 or 50 conversions per second.

              $313.00

              RTD Temperature 

              Accuracy of 0.01% of reading ± 2 counts. High read rates at up to 60 or 50 conversions per second.

                $313.00

                Ohmmeter for Resistance in Ohms

                Accuracy of 0.01% of reading ± 2 counts. High read rates at up to 60 or 50 conversions per second.

                  $313.00

                  Industrial Electronic Digital Counters

                  Industrial Electronic Digital Timers

                  What Are Panel Meters?

                  Panel meters are instruments mounted in the face of a control panel or enclosure that measure an electrical or process signal and display the result where operators can read it. As a category, panel meters range from simple analog moving-pointer dials to high-accuracy digital panel meters with numeric LED or LCD readouts, alarms, and network communications. Industrial users choose from a broad selection of panel meters because each measurement — voltage, current, temperature, weight, flow, frequency — calls for a meter with the right input and display. The sections below lay out the main types of panel meters and how to compare them, so you can move from the general category to the specific meter your application needs.

                  Types of Panel Meters

                  • Voltage and current panel meters: DC and true-RMS AC models for power, drives, and instrumentation.
                  • Temperature panel meters: Thermocouple and RTD meters for process and laboratory ranges.
                  • Load cell and strain gauge panel meters: For weighing, force, and materials testing.
                  • Process panel meters: 4–20 mA, 0–10 V, and ratiometric meters for transmitters and bridges.
                  • Counter and timer panel meters: Frequency, rate, totalizer, batch, and timing models.
                  • Resistance panel meters: Ohmmeters for contact resistance and component testing.

                  How to Compare Panel Meters

                  • Input type: The signal you measure sets which panel meter you need — this is the first decision.
                  • Accuracy and resolution: Higher digit counts and tighter accuracy classes for precision work; simpler meters for basic indication.
                  • Display: LED for bright, long-distance reading or LCD for low power.
                  • Outputs and communications: Relay alarms, analog retransmission, and digital protocols for control-system integration.
                  • Size and power: Standardized DIN cutouts and a supply voltage that match your panel.

                  Where Panel Meters Are Used

                  • Power and energy management: Voltage, current, and power indication on distribution panels.
                  • Industrial automation: Temperature, flow, pressure, and rate on machinery and control panels.
                  • Weighing and testing: Load cell and strain gauge readouts in scales and test benches.
                  • Renewable energy: True-RMS measurement of the non-sinusoidal output of inverters and turbines.

                  Frequently Asked Questions

                  What types of panel meters are available?

                  Panel meters cover voltage and current (DC and true-RMS AC), temperature (thermocouple and RTD), load cell and strain gauge, process signals such as 4–20 mA and 0–10 V, resistance, and counting or timing functions like frequency, rate, totalizing, and batch control. You choose the type by matching the meter to the signal you need to measure and display.

                  How do I compare panel meters from different families?

                  Start with the input, since it determines the meter family, then compare on accuracy and resolution, display type, and the outputs you need. When panel meters share a common platform — as Laurel's do — they use the same housing, power options, and plug-in boards, so once the input is fixed you can compare models mainly on accuracy, display color, and communications.

                  Are digital panel meters better than analog panel meters?

                  For most modern applications, yes. Digital panel meters give exact numeric values, far higher accuracy, and the ability to add alarms, analog retransmission, and digital communications. Analog panel meters remain useful where a quick visual sense of a trend is all that is needed, but they cannot match digital meters for precision or system integration.

                  Do all panel meters use the same panel cutout?

                  Not all, but standardized DIN sizes make mixing them easy. A common format is 1/8 DIN, roughly 96 × 48 mm. When your panel meters share a standard size, you can install different measurement types side by side with matching cutouts and a uniform appearance, and swap one for another without modifying the panel.

                  Can panel meters communicate with a PLC or SCADA system?

                  Digital panel meters can, with the right option board. They retransmit readings as a scaled 4–20 mA or 0–10 V output, drive relays from setpoints, and communicate over RS-232, RS-485, USB, Ethernet, or WiFi using Modbus RTU and Modbus TCP/IP. This lets panel meters serve as networked nodes in an automation system, not just standalone displays.

                  How do I choose between panel meters for a new installation?

                  Fix the input signal first, then set the accuracy and display you need, and finally specify the outputs and communications your control system requires. Confirm the DIN cutout size and supply voltage match your panel. Following that order narrows a broad selection of panel meters down to the specific model quickly and reliably.

                  More Information...