Fluid Power World February 2019

Page 28

ENERGY EFFICIENCY

Ron Marshall • Contributing Editor

False economy on air compressor purchase

A

A compressed air system used for engine start duty needed a new air compressor. The old unit had been troublesome and it was difficult to get parts. Purchasing was asked for quotes for a new unit and obtained three bids from various suppliers. In comparing the prices for the replacement, the purchasing department representative saw that two of the bids were similar in price. One of these was the same lubricated screw compressor they had installed in another system — that had exactly the same application. But the third unit had a 20% lower cost, and the supplier had glowing references about the quality and long life their units provided. Purchasing felt it was a no-brainer, so they went with the lowest bid, saving $7,000 on the sale price. About a year after installation, a compressed air auditor did some routine measurements to see how the systems in the facility were operating. Measurements revealed that the two engine start systems, one of which used the new compressor, had quite different operating costs. While one cost only about $2,000 per year in electrical consumption, the other, using the new compressor, consumed $25,000 per year in electricity. Unknown to the purchasing department, the new compressor that had been purchased was stripped bare of any energy-saving features. This compressor, producing very little average air flow, ran constantly in a control mode called modulation and had no other operating regime except “constant run.” In modulation, this compressor runs constantly — and while doing so consumes no less than 70% of its full load power.

26

FLUID POWER WORLD

FPW 2-19 EnergyEfficiency_Vs3.indd 26

2 • 2019

This compressor was costing over ten times what it should have because it was missing a few important energy saving options.

The other system used a brand of compressor that runs in the more efficient load/unload mode, and these compressors were equipped with auto shutdown. This allows the compressor to completely shut down, using minimal power, between load cycles. As a result, the compressor spends most of its time turned off. The purchasing agent had saved the company $7,000 in purchase costs, but his decision to buy based only on the initial price cost the company $23,000 in extra electricity costs for every year of compressor life. This is false economy at its extreme. When purchasing air compressors, especially the lubricated screw variant, total life cycle costs need to be taken into account! FPW

www.fluidpowerworld.com

2/15/19 1:07 PM


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.