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Air Compressor Performance Degradation Signs
Technical Guide

Air Compressor Performance Degradation Signs

12 min read
Diagnostics

That machine in the compressor room that's been running six years has been acting up lately. Operator can't say exactly what's wrong, just feels like not enough air. Packaging line cylinders are moving slower, used to snap into position, now sluggish. Maintenance went to look at the pressure gauge, 6.4 bar, should be 7 bar.

Problem is, pressure didn't just drop to 6.4 today. Three months ago maybe it was 6.8, two months ago 6.6, nobody noticed, production line could still run so whatever. Wait until packaging line has problems before someone thinks to check the pressure gauge.

50%
US Department of Energy estimated industrial compressed air consumes about one-tenth of all US manufacturing electricity. Half of that is wasted. Half. This number sounds exaggerated, but walk through any old plant's compressed air network, shine an ultrasonic leak detector around, so many leak points you'd think this isn't delivering compressed air but throwing money into the air.
1

Intake Side Problems Are Most Easily Overlooked

Nobody thinks to check the intake valve. Butterfly valve or poppet valve, should normally be fully open. But oil and dust caked on the valve stem, over time opening isn't enough, opens to 70%, intake volume is only 70%, motor power basically unchanged. This kind of problem you can see once you take it apart. Who's going to take apart the intake valve for no reason? Usually wait until output is obviously insufficient, check everything and find nothing, finally think of the intake side.

Air filters are worse off. Filter element costs $4, differential should be below 25 mbar, but many plants don't change air filters for a year and a half. Maintenance reasoning is "looks okay still." Actually measure and might be over 60 mbar, compressor intake is like sucking through a straw that's half blocked. Some maintenance figures it still runs anyway, wait until next planned shutdown. Next planned shutdown is three months away.

In 2007 when Shanghai Gaoyang International Tobacco Company was audited by UNIDO's China Motor Systems Energy Efficiency Project, auditors found a situation that made you laugh and cry: an oil filter was installed in the piping of an oil-free compressor. Whoever installed it probably figured more filtration is safer. This unnecessary filter caused 0.4 bar pressure drop, equivalent to 3.2% of system energy consumption wasted. How much extra electricity per year? Nobody calculated it until auditors pointed it out.

2

Internal Leakage Is a Chronic Disease

Screw element wear you can't see or touch. New machine rotor fit precision is extremely high, after tens of thousands of hours the gaps slowly widen. During compression process gas leaks back, leaked gas has to be compressed again. A machine with 40,000 hours might have over ten percent of displacement circulating inside the airend going nowhere.

Compressor efficiency
Efficiency degradation often goes unnoticed until measured

Compressed Air Best Practices magazine ran a case in their July 2023 issue. A magnetic materials company in the US had Kaeser do an air demand analysis, measured specific power was 32 kW/100 cfm, while industry benchmark is below 21 kW/100 cfm. More than half again worse. The plant didn't know their system was this bad before, because they'd never measured. After optimization, annual energy consumption cut by 42%. Money saved, enough to replace the entire compressor room with new equipment within three years.

Electricity bill goes up, finance will come asking. Output unchanged, electricity bill jumps a chunk, numbers don't add up. Maintenance department's first thought usually isn't compressor, it's other big power consumers. Checked AC, checked lighting, checked production equipment, finally gets around to compressor room. By this point might have wasted half a year of unnecessary money.

3

High Temp Alarms Are One of the Few Signals That Make People Act Immediately

Pressure a bit low can manage, efficiency a bit poor doesn't show on paper, but high temp shutdown can't be managed. Trips three times a week, production department will come banging on the table.

A

Air-cooled compressor heat exchangers fear dust accumulation most. Fins stuffed with lint, dust, oil mist condensate, like putting a cotton jacket on the heat exchanger. Cleaning can solve it, but requires shutdown, and heat exchangers are often installed in the hardest to reach spot on the machine.

B

Fans themselves can also have problems. Motor bearing worn, speed drops, airflow drops by square relationship. Some plants monitor fan current, can warn several weeks in advance; plants without monitoring only know when fan completely stops spinning.

C

Oil condition directly affects temperature. Oil aged and its ability to carry heat away is poor, oil level low means not enough participating in circulation. Some plants regularly test oil quality, some plants rely on smell, smells burnt then they know it's time to change oil.

A 2021 paper published in IOP Conference Series analyzed a glass factory's compressed air system in Barranquilla, Colombia. Researchers found compressor room location was problematic, room temperature averaged 10°C higher than outdoor, hottest times 15°C difference. Compressor was breathing in its own exhaust heat. When they located the compressor room nobody considered this, only discovered after commissioning that summer it simply couldn't run normally, high temp alarms became routine.

4

Fix or Not Fix

Shanghai Gaoyang Results

Installed pressure-flow controller, stabilized supply pressure between 6.05 and 6.6 bar, increased compressor idle time. Result was 8.17% system energy savings. One controller, plus removing that filter that shouldn't have been installed, payback period a few months.

Pharmaceutical Plant Case

A 2024 paper published on ResearchGate tracked a pharmaceutical packaging plant's compressed air optimization from December 2020 to May 2022. Fixed leaks, adjusted pressure, modified operating conditions, tinkered for a year and a half, compressor electricity down 23%, air consumption down 7-8%.

How long did these problems exist before optimization? Nobody knows.

Most factories' compressed air systems have never had a serious efficiency assessment. Machines bought, installed, and run, run until broken then repair, can't repair then replace. How much electricity wasted, how much air leaked, how much capacity lost to an inefficient system, don't do this accounting and you'll never know. Someday when someone does calculate seriously, numbers often make management uneasy.

Air filter maintenance
$4 filter element vs. hundreds in wasted electricity

Clogged air filter, swap it for $4, let it stay clogged six months and wasted electricity is hundreds of dollars. Airend overhaul at 40,000 hours can run another 40,000 hours, run it out of oil and it burns up, can only sell for scrap. Everyone understands the reasoning, but between understanding and doing there's a "it still runs for now."

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