CHANUN HT Screw Air Compressor
- Product description
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CHANUN HT Screw Air Compressor
Video introduction:No oil leakage risk:
(1) The pipeline adopts the Walform process, with seamless and integrated extrusion of metal.
(2) The use of fluorine-based flexible couplings with a semi-permanent nature.
(3) The pipeline is formed through a single bending process, without welding, eliminating the risk of oil leakage.
(4) The use of a stainless steel explosion-proof oil viewing mirror with high temperature and pressure resistance up to 160 bar.High-standard configuration:
(1) Oil-cooled motor: With a protection level of IP65 or above, it uses magnetic steel with a temperature resistance of 180°C, without demagnetization risk.
(2) Screw compressor unit: The unit uses eight bearings. It has a ten-year warranty.
(3) Frequency converter: It adopts the most advanced vector control technology internationally, enabling the unit to operate within a wide speed range of the machine, ensuring the minimum temperature rise of the motor, and obtaining the appropriate torque to smoothly drive the air compressor.Easy maintenance:
Maintenance video:(1) Chanun independently developed a fully external combined long-life oil filter, supporting user self-maintenance.
(2) Use the original Donelson oil filter and air filter to ensure trouble-free operation of the system.
(3) Chanun independently developed the oil filter base, increasing the air flow channel, significantly reducing pressure loss, and improving the overall efficiency.
(4) Humanized design: The oil viewing mirror and pressure gauge can be viewed without opening the cabinet.
The Evolution of Air Power: Choosing the Right CompressorIn a workshop, compressed air is like the electrical current flowing through the air itself—the invisible force that powers everything. Picking the right compressor matters. It's the difference between a manageable electricity bill, equipment that lasts, and a workshop where you can actually have a conversation. The Permanent Magnet Variable Frequency Drive (PMVFD) screw compressor gets a lot of buzz these days, but is it truly the best choice across the board? Let's put it side-by-side with its "old acquaintances": the piston compressor, the oil-free silent compressor, and the traditional fixed-speed screw compressor.
1. The Piston Compressor: The Gasping "Workhorse"
Picture a simple, rugged machine with a low upfront cost, chugging away like an old single-cylinder diesel engine—that's the piston compressor. It's the entry-level choice for many small shops. But its downsides are as obvious as its operating principle: it's noisy, vibrates like crazy, and delivers air in pulses (which is terrible for precision tools). And here's the real kicker: its "brain" only has two modes—"full blast" and "complete off." When air demand drops, it just starts and stops repeatedly, idling wastefully in between. This makes it notoriously energy-hungry. Add in all the wearing parts that need frequent attention, and maintenance becomes, well, a chore. It’s fine for tiny, intermittent jobs, but for continuous operation, its "appetite" for electricity will shock you.
2. The Oil-Free Silent Compressor: The "White-Glove Specialist"
Now, this one is a different breed. Often using scroll technology, it specializes in two things: 100% oil-free air and library-level hush. Think laboratories, dental clinics, or food packaging lines—places where even a trace of oil is a disaster or where noise is a no-go. Here, this "specialist" is irreplaceable. But that "purity" and "silence" come at a cost: a higher price tag, generally lower airflow (CFM) output, and often, not the best energy efficiency. In short, it's a "special forces" unit for specific, critical needs, not the "main infantry" for a large-scale industrial battlefield.
3. The Traditional Fixed-Speed Screw: The Former "Gold Standard"
The arrival of the screw compressor was a huge leap forward. It uses two meshing rotors to deliver smooth, continuous airflow—way more stable and with less maintenance than piston machines. It became the industrial workhorse for decades. But it has a critical, built-in flaw: its motor runs at a constant speed. Imagine a car with only cruise control and no fine throttle adjustment. When less air is needed, it relies on a "load/unload" mechanism—the motor is still spinning, but it's not producing air, effectively burning 20-40% of its full-load power just to stay ready. Frankly, it's always on standby at 100% effort, regardless of the actual workload. In conditions with fluctuating demand, this "idle waste" keeps your power bills stubbornly high.
4. The PMVFD Screw Compressor: The Smart & Efficient Heir
Alright, enter the new contender. The PMVFD screw is a fusion of two top-tier technologies. The Permanent Magnet (PM) motor is inherently more efficient (IE4/IE5 class)—think of it as an athlete who's naturally stronger but eats less. The Variable Frequency Drive (VFD) is the "smart brain" and "continuously variable transmission" for that athlete.
Its advantages, in contrast, are pretty direct:
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Vs. the Piston Compressor: This is a decisive win. Drastically lower energy use, airflow as smooth as a calm lake, workshop noise dropping from "rock concert" to "background hum," and way less maintenance headaches.
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Vs. the Oil-Free Silent Compressor: In spaces demanding absolute air purity, it doesn't compete (unless it's a specific oil-free PMVFD model). But for the vast majority of general industrial applications, its energy efficiency and output per dollar are far superior. Simply put, for pristine air, choose the specialist; for saving energy and money, choose this one.
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Vs. the Traditional Screw Compressor: This is the real "core upgrade." The VFD technology cures the "idle waste" disease perfectly. Low demand? It slows down to a "walk." High demand? It speeds up to a "run." It matches output in real time, easily saving over 30% in energy costs. Plus, you get benefits like soft starts and rock-steady pressure (within ±0.1 bar), which is easier on both the electrical grid and the machine itself.
Conclusion
Choosing a compressor isn't about the price tag alone; it's about the total cost of ownership. Piston compressors are cheap to buy but expensive to run. Oil-free machines are essential specialists but costly. The PMVFD screw compressor, with its combo of a "high-efficiency heart" and a "smart brain," directly fixes the traditional screw's Achilles' heel of wasted energy. For most factories with fluctuating air demand and a focus on long-term operational savings, it's no longer just "an option"—it's fast becoming the new benchmark for efficiency and reliability. It makes producing compressed air smarter and more economical than ever before.
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