KAESER COMPRESSORS’ SX, SM, and SK series of rotary screw compressors are the perfect solution for smaller compressed air systems. Not only do these compressors deliver more compressed air for sustainable energy savings, they also. .
From the ground up, these compressors have been designed with the user in mind. Fewer wearing parts and using premium quality materials ensure reduced maintenance. .
With a cutting edge research and development team committed to building industry-leading products, KAESER continues to deliver. .
KAESER’s screw compressors meet our rigorous “built for a lifetime” standard. Designed and built with KAESER’s generations of. .
In our systems design approach, KAESER chooses the components that work together in the most energy efficient way possible. Each and.
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On today’s market, you have a choice of two main types of industrial rotary compressor – vane and screw. Although both are designed to produce the same output, they differ considerably in terms of energy efficiency. Here, we give you the low down. .
How they work – A rotary-vane compressorcomprises a rotor, with slots along its sides which house individual sliding vanes. This assembly is offset within a cylinder, or ‘stator’, and rotates on white-metal bushes. As the rotor turns on its axis, the vanes. .
Vane compressors typically run at lower speeds than relatively leaky screw machines. For example, Mattei’s fixed-speed Maximaoperates at 1,000rpm, versus the average screw compressor’s 3,000rpm or higher. Rotary-vane machines also have. .
How they work– A screw compressor has two parallel rotors which intersect along their sides. Replaceable roller bearings fitted into a stator maintain the rotors’ minimum clearance. During rotation, the intermeshing rotors compress the air. Their efficiency–.
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