A conical tip-shaped plastic optical fiber sensor for gas-liquid flow measurement is described. Experimental results show that a distinctive spike signal occurs before the output signal when using a conventional conical fiber probe, whereas this spike signal was greatly suppressed when a cleaved probe is used. A full simulation is implemented based on a three-dimensional ray-tracing method providing a means of comparison with theoretical analysis. The results show that an appropriately cleaved tip provides a promising method of enhancing the bubble measurement signal-to-noise ratio.