From the Wellhead to the Control Room: How Classic Controls Covers the Whole Measurement Loop

Classic Controls Covers the Whole Measurement Loop

Most plants don't have a measurement problem. They have a dozen, scattered across the site.


There's a tank farm where somebody needs level within a quarter inch. A boiler that has to light off safely every time. A compressor train worth more than the building it sits in. A loading rack where every gallon across the meter is money. A control valve that's been hunting for six months and nobody can say why. And a maintenance manager holding it together with a crew smaller than it was five years ago.

Classic Controls has spent decades in exactly that middle. From Lakeland, Florida, we support process instrumentation, valves, and control systems across Florida and southern Georgia, and out through Puerto Rico, the Caribbean, and Central America — including refining and offshore energy work in Trinidad and Tobago, Guyana, and Suriname. Customers don't call because we sell instruments. They call because we've usually seen their problem before.

What does Classic Controls actually handle?

Close to the whole loop:

Level. Radar and guided wave radar for tanks, silos, and vessels that used to be gauged with a stick and a prayer. Point level switches for high-high alarms and pump protection. And the applications with foam, agitation, or steam, where the textbook answer is wrong.

Flow. Thermal mass meters for compressed air, natural gas, flare, and digester gas — where you need standard cubic feet, not actual. Ultrasonic clamp-on and inline meters for liquids and gas, including lines nobody will shut down long enough to cut in a spool. Helical turbine and positive displacement meters for custody transfer, truck loading, and hydrocarbon movements where the ticket has to survive an audit. Vane and thermal switches for pump protection and cooling water.

Pressure and temperature. Transmitters, mechanical gauges, diaphragm seals for slurry and sanitary service, bimetal and filled thermometers, and switches with real mechanical repeatability. Plus RTDs, thermocouples, and thermowells built for the actual insertion length, process connection, and vibration environment — not a catalog approximation.

Analytical. pH, ORP, conductivity, dissolved oxygen, and lab-grade water analysis for treatment plants and process water loops. Moisture and oxygen analyzers for gas streams. Sample conditioning systems and membrane separators that keep liquid carryover out of an analyzer that costs five figures to repair.

Machinery protection. Proximity probes, seismic sensors, and vibration monitoring for turbines, compressors, pumps, and fans. A critical machine should tell you it's in trouble before it proves it.

Combustion safety. Flame safeguard and burner management for boilers, ovens, dryers, and heaters. Code-driven work, treated that way.

Control and infrastructure. Distributed control systems, recorders, panel meters and digital indicators, intrinsic safety barriers and isolators, purge and pressurization systems, remote I/O, DIN rail components and enclosures, surge and lightning protection, and proximity and photoelectric sensing. Plus wireless telemetry for assets half a mile from the nearest conduit run — remote tanks, wellheads, and pump stations never worth trenching to.

The final control element. Measurement only matters if something acts on it. We handle control valves and actuation in the same conversation, and we service them: our Lakeland facility has warehousing, a machine shop, a production area, and QC and test capability, so valve and actuator repair happens here instead of shipping out and waiting. We do systems integration too.

Why does that breadth matter?

Because loops don't respect product categories.

A phosphate operation calls about erratic flow readings. The meter's fine. It's a grounding issue that shows up during afternoon storms, and surge protection is the fix, not a new transmitter. A treatment plant fights pH drift and blames the analyzer, when the culprit is the sample system upstream. A refinery chases a control problem through the transmitter and the DCS tuning before anyone looks at the valve positioner.

If your supplier only sells one of those things, guess which one they recommend.

Working with us

We're a manufacturer's representative and stocking distributor: we carry inventory, we handle startup and commissioning, and we troubleshoot in the field when a loop won't behave. We size, configure, and help write specs. When a device is fifteen years old and the OEM has moved on, we'll tell you honestly whether to keep it or migrate.

The territory has its own personality — heat, humidity, lightning, salt air, storm season, and long logistics tails on islands where a two-week lead time is a shutdown. Instruments that behave in Ohio behave differently here. That context is part of what we bring, whether the site is in Polk County or offshore Guyana.

If you've got an application that isn't cooperating, or a project that needs someone to think through the whole loop instead of quoting a part number, we're a call away.