About Us

Lincoln Instruments, Inc.
Lincoln Instruments, Inc. , a privately held company was
incorporated in the state of California in November 1975.
Headquarters is a 8,500 square foot building at 2720 Kimball
Avenue in Pomona, California.

The capabilities and past experience we bring to bear
through our instrumentation includes our design engineering,
manufacturing, procurement, and project management
capabilities.

Lincoln Instruments, Inc.

Engineering Capabilities

Our engineering capabilities and past experience include
the ability to design and develop:

  • High performance digital panel meters
  • Field calibratable digital process indicators.
  • High resolution analog to digital converters
  • Low level signal conditioning.
  • Custom analog to digital converters with a
    microprocessor interface.
  • Charge monitors
  • Voltage and current simulators.
  • Portable vibration calibrators
  • Piezoresistive pressure digital indicators.
  • BCD analyzers/controllers.
  • Communication interface

Products designed and manufactured by Lincoln Instruments include:

  • Single channel microprocessor-based power supply and readout modules for use with capacitance manometers
  • Single channel microprocessor-based configurable digital indicator and power supply capable of interfacing directly to an analog mass flow meter, mass flow controller, or pressure transducer
  • Single channel Signal conditioners for use in vehicles, inline mount or Din rail mountable
  • Single channel 5-digit red LED display, 1/8 DIN panel mount strain gage signal conditioner
  • 3-channel microprocessor controlled  signal conditioner for PE/IEPE sensors
  • 3-channel microprocessor controlled,  DC signal conditioner amplifier designed for use with bridge-type or differential output accelerometers and pressure sensors
  • Single Channel load cell indicator with 5 digit bipolar LED display
  • 4-channel stand-alone microprocessor-based configurable digital indicator and power supply capable of interfacing directly to analog mass flow meters, mass flow controllers, or pressure transducers