NZMS DEBRIS CUSTOM SENSOR RENDER LARGE

Custom Debris Detection

NZMS DEBRIS CUSTOM SENSOR RENDER SMALL
  • Continuous Ferrous Debris Monitoring
  • Reduces Service Calls and Warranty Costs
  • Compact for Easy Deployment
  • Highly Configurable for Unique Applications
  • Continuous Ferrous Debris Monitoring
  • Reduces Service Calls and Warranty Costs
  • Compact for Easy Deployment
  • Highly Configurable for Unique Applications
Home / Custom Debris Detection

The KasperAero NZMS debris sensor brings proven oil debris monitoring technology into the mass market with custom solutions developed for each customer. The NZMS provides the earliest warning of component failure by detecting debris in oil and other fluid systems. It can be applied in gearboxes, fuel systems, and hydraulics, and it can also be tailored for unique applications. The NZMS offers reliable, cost-effective monitoring that works as a stand-alone sensor or as part of a fully integrated system.


Typical Applications

  • Automotive High Pressure Diesel Pumps
  • Long Haul Trucking Transmissions
  • Directly Integrated Gear Motor Monitoring
  • Marine Propulsion Systems
  • Off-Highway Construction Machinery
  • Rail Axle Bearings
  • Mining Haul Truck Final Drives
  • Hydraulic Excavator Swing Drives
  • Helicopter Rotor Drive Systems
  • Machine Tools Lubrication Systems

Key Features

  • Real-time, continuous condition monitoring
  • Captures and measures both fine & coarse ferrous wear debris
  • Flexible output options: analog, digital, or CAN bus integration
  • Low power design for battery-driven or embedded systems
  • Designed for scalability in high-volume applications
  • Tailored performance tuning for specific machine failure modes
  • Highly Configurable for Unique Applications

Product Overview

Performance Advantages

The KasperAero NZMS debris sensor brings proven oil debris monitoring technology into the mass market with custom solutions developed for each customer. The NZMS provides the earliest warning of component failure by detecting debris in oil and other fluid systems. It can be applied in gearboxes, fuel systems, and hydraulics, and it can also be tailored for unique applications. The NZMS offers reliable, cost-effective monitoring that works as a stand-alone sensor or as part of a fully integrated system.

Rendering of Custom Debris sensor electrical connector integrated

Product Features:

  • Senses Fine Ferrous Dust
  • Extremely Compact
  • Low Cost
  • Low Power Draw
  • Low Noise (EMI/EMR)
  • Rugged design for harsh environments
  • No Moving Parts
  • No Microcontrollers
  • No Temperature Compensation
  • No Calibration
  • No Electrodes Exposed to Fluid Environment

Cost Savings

A custom debris sensor offers significant cost savings and value across industries by addressing problems before they escalate. By detecting early signs of wear or contamination, it reduces the likelihood of recalls, lowers maintenance expenses, and minimizes unscheduled downtime and costly repairs. From automotive systems to wind turbines, the ability to identify degradation before it leads to failure prevents catastrophic breakdowns and enhances overall safety. Beyond cost reduction, the sensor also acts as a safeguard for life-critical systems and serves as a differentiating feature for manufacturers who want to offer customers the assurance of higher reliability and extended equipment life.


Core Capabilities

  • Continuous ferrous debris detection
  • Real-time oil condition monitoring
  • Compact form factor for embedded systems
  • Rugged design for harsh environments
  • Zero-maintenance solid-state construction

Strategic Benefits

  • Prevent unplanned downtime
  • Lower total cost of ownership
  • Enable predictive maintenance

Custom Options

Housing Materials

Plastic Injection Molded Housings

Housing Materials: Plastic Injection Molded

Die Cast Housings

Housing Materials: Die Cast

Machined Housings

Housing Materials: Machinedfrom Billet

Attachment Methods

Flange Attachment

Sensor Attachment: Multibolt Flange

Threaded Attachment

Sensor Attachment: Threads

Quick Release (Bayonette Style) Attachment

Sensor Attachment: Quick release bayoneete style quick release

Other Options

Integrated Electrical Connector

Electrical Connector Integrated into the sensor render

Specialized Chemical Compatibility

A debris sensor made from Teflon for specialized chemical compatibility

Frequently Asked Questions

No, the NZMS debris sensor does not collect or detect non-ferrous debris such as aluminum, brass, ceramics, or dirt.

No, the NZMS debris sensor is completely axially symmetric and can operate reliably in any orientation. Its performance is unaffected by how it is mounted, allowing flexible installation in a wide variety of systems.

In applications where the sensor is positioned away from nearby ferrous materials, the NZMS debris sensor does not require calibration. Because it detects disturbances in magnetic fields, non-ferrous metals such as aluminum, annealed stainless steel, magnesium, brass, lead, copper, zinc, and titanium have absolutely no effect on its readings. These materials are invisible to the sensor and allows for straightforward installation without the need for adjustment.

Yes. KasperAero debris sensors are designed to respond to a wide range of particle sizes, from fine metallic dust that may point to early-stage wear, to larger chips or fragments that typically signal more severe mechanical damage. While the NZMS sensor can detect both, it does not differentiate particle size. The signal is influenced by the overall mass of metallic material accumulated on the sensor rather than whether that mass comes from many tiny particles or a single larger chip.

Yes, additional measurements can be integrated alongside debris sensing to create a more comprehensive monitoring system. Common examples include temperature, pressure, and water-in-fuel or water-in-oil detection. These features are not standard on the NZMS debris sensor, but our team can explore integration options based on your application requirements. Please contact us to discuss customization.

Debris sensors can be connected via analog, digital, IO Link, CAN bus, or Modbus outputs, depending on system requirements. They can also be tailored to trigger alerts when debris levels exceed safe thresholds.

The NZMS sensor can also be configured for very low sensitivity. By tuning circuit components for a wide dynamic range, the sensor maintains low sensitivity even when paired with a strong magnet. This approach is useful for avoiding nuisance trips, filtering out debris generated during normal break-in periods, or in applications where a certain amount of wear is expected.

Whether or not to clean the sensor face depends on your specific application. Some systems may allow periodic cleaning, similar to a magnetic drain plug, while others may recommend leaving the sensor untouched. Always follow your maintenance guidelines to determine if and when cleaning is appropriate during the sensor’s operational life.

The NZMS debris sensor is highly reliable due to its lack of moving parts. Its service life can be influenced by factors such as vibration, thermal cycles and shocks, maximum operating temperature, and chemical compatibility with the monitored fluid. The durability of the housing and the sensor’s seals (o-rings) also play a role. When installed and maintained according to specifications, the sensor is designed to provide long-term, dependable operation.

The minimum sensor diameter depends on the required magnet strength and the physical size of key circuit components. With our current manufacturing processes, we can reliably produce sensors as small as Ø0.380 inches. While an electromagnet could enable a smaller design, this solution introduces trade-offs such as intermittent sensing and increased debris attraction.

The NZMS debris sensor works by detecting disturbances in a magnetic field. Nearby ferrous materials such as steel or even cold-worked stainless steel can alter the field and be picked up by the sensor. These effects can be minimized through careful design and post-installation calibration, though both add cost and complexity. For best results, the sensor should be positioned away from other ferrous objects. Fortunately, magnetic strength decreases rapidly with distance (dropping off with the cube of the distance), so objects farther away have little influence. Our engineering team can also model these interactions to ensure your installation performs as expected.

Transient magnetic fields (such as those generated by high-voltage wiring, motors, fuel injectors, or ignition systems) can influence NZMS debris sensor readings if the sensor is mounted too close. To minimize these effects, KasperAero employs several strategies:

  1. Signal Averaging
    Because transient fields vary with time, multiple readings can be averaged (digitally or via analog circuitry) to filter out noise.
  2. Startup/Shutdown Monitoring
    In certain applications, accurate readings can be taken during startup or shutdown, before other systems generate significant magnetic interference. The sensor then holds the output until the next cycle.
  3. On-Vehicle Testing
    Practical testing with real hardware helps validate performance in the intended environment.
  4. Simulation Support
    Our engineering team can model the impact of nearby magnetic sources to ensure optimal installation.

Yes, but only to a limited extent. Rust is weakly magnetic, and its detectability depends on the type present. Magnetite (Fe₃O₄) is more magnetic and easier to detect, while hematite (Fe₂O₃) is less magnetic and produces a weaker response. Because rust composition can vary significantly, KasperAero recommends independent testing to confirm performance in rust detection applications.

The NZMS sensor is capable of extremely high sensitivity. In testing, it has exceeded the 0.015-gram detection threshold published in our product datasheets. With the use of higher-grade PCB components and stronger magnets, sensitivity can be pushed beyond typical industrial needs and into laboratory-grade performance.

The NZMS sensor can also be configured for very low sensitivity. By tuning circuit components for a wide dynamic range, the sensor maintains low sensitivity even when paired with a strong magnet. This approach is useful for avoiding nuisance trips, filtering out debris generated during normal break-in periods, or in applications where a certain amount of wear is expected.

The NZMS sensor can also be configured for very low sensitivity. By tuning circuit components for a wide dynamic range, the sensor maintains low sensitivity even when paired with a strong magnet. This approach is useful for avoiding nuisance trips, filtering out debris generated during normal break-in periods, or in applications where a certain amount of wear is expected.

Most NZMS debris sensors are intentionally designed to have a delayed reaction (typically under three seconds) to reduce false positives and ensure highly reliable data. If your application requires faster response times, KasperAero’s engineering team can provide customized solutions.

The NZMS debris sensor is designed to deliver exceptional performance at a cost that makes large-scale deployment practical. At its core, the technology requires only a small set of components: a housing, a permanent magnet, epoxy, a circuit board, and a wiring harness. This simplicity makes the underlying sensor inherently economical compared to many other condition-monitoring technologies. Cost is influenced by the following factors:

  1. Assembly and Calibration
    Although the bill of materials is straightforward, the precision required for assembly, calibration, and quality assurance introduces proprietary manufacturing costs. These ensure that each sensor meets strict performance standards.
  2. Material and Tooling Choices
    Different applications may call for specialized housings, high-temperature materials, or custom form factors. Each of these decisions influences both tooling requirements and unit price.
  3. Production Volume
    As with most electronic devices, volume has the largest impact on cost per unit. Low-volume custom runs are inherently more expensive, while high-volume production allows for aggressive economies of scale.

As an example, a custom order of around 100 units might result in a per-sensor cost of roughly $350. In contrast, scaling production to 100,000 units can drive the cost down to the $40–50 range per sensor. This wide range demonstrates both the flexibility of the technology and the strong cost advantage it can provide when deployed at scale.

The development timeline for a custom NZMS debris sensor depends on several factors, both on our side and the customer’s. While KasperAero is a small, agile engineering team, project schedules are influenced by workload, complexity, and the level of testing and validation required for your application.

  1. Requirements Definition
    A project begins with establishing clear design requirements: target sensitivity, form factor, environmental conditions, electrical interface, and integration constraints. The clarity of these specifications greatly impacts how quickly development can proceed.
  2. Design & Prototyping
    Once requirements are confirmed, our engineers create preliminary designs and build prototypes. Depending on complexity, this stage can take anywhere from a few weeks to several months. Early prototypes are used to validate the concept and uncover any unforeseen challenges.
  3. Testing & Iteration
    Prototypes undergo testing to ensure accuracy, durability, and compatibility with the intended system. Some customers require extensive testing—such as vibration, temperature cycling, or fluid exposure—while others may only need functional validation. More extensive testing lengthens the timeline but provides added assurance.
  4. Tooling & Manufacturing Preparation
    Custom housings, specialized materials, or unique geometries may require new tooling or machining processes. These steps can add several weeks depending on supplier lead times and complexity.
  5. Pilot Production & Scale-Up
    After validation, a small batch is produced to verify customer satisfaction. Once approved, production can be scaled to meet the required volume.

KasperAero provides comprehensive support for all NZMS debris sensors. Our team can assist with installation guidance, system integration, calibration questions, and troubleshooting. We also offer support for interpreting sensor data, optimizing sensor placement, and modeling the effects of nearby ferrous materials. For custom applications, our engineers are available to review design requirements and provide recommendations to ensure optimal sensor performance. Support is available via email, phone, or virtual consultation, and we aim to respond promptly to all inquiries.

NZMS_Custom_Debris_Example_001.STEP
CAD Model preview for an example custom debris sensor
NZMS_Custom_Debris_Example_002.STEP
CAD Model preview for an example custom debris sensor
NZMS_Custom_Debris_Example_003.STEP
CAD Model preview for an example custom debris sensor
NZMS_Custom_Debris_Example_004.STEP
CAD Model preview for an example custom debris sensor