• EXAIR’s Air Knives are an efficient and highly effective tool for blowoff, cooling, cleaning, and drying in myriad manufacturing processes.
    EXAIR’s Air Knives are an efficient and highly effective tool for blowoff, cooling, cleaning, and drying in myriad manufacturing processes.
Close×

EXAIR’s Air Knives are an efficient and highly effective tool for blowoff, cooling, cleaning, and drying in myriad manufacturing processes.

For the wide variety of problems manufacturers face, Exair can customise and tailor Air Knives from size, to shape, material, custom mounting holes and dimensions to solve distinct manufacturing problems not already resolved by the industry’s largest selection of Air Knives. For customers with space limitations, smaller lengths or skinnier profiles can be created.

In situations where the knife may need to be installed in a very defined spot, special mounting brackets, or additional/custom sized air inlets can be provided to fit a current system.

For applications where stock aluminium, stainless steel or PVDF won’t work, other material options such as CPVC or glass filled PEEK thermoplastic have been used. Special marking requirements for tying knives to specific machines or critical processes can be accommodated.

Unique shapes and profiles, such as double sided or curved Air Knives, can solve certain specialised processes. For help solving any specific blowoff problems, please contact Compressed Air Australia.

This Product News first appeared in the April 2022 edition of Food & Drink Business  

Packaging News

The World Packaging Organisation has named 234 winners for the WorldStar Packaging Awards 2026, which were selected from 481 entries submitted across 36 countries.

ACOR is calling on the Government to urgently introduce packaging reforms or risk the collapse of Australia’s plastic recycling sector and face millions of tonnes of plastic waste polluting the environment.

As 2025 draws to a close, it is clear the packaging sector has undergone one of its most consequential years in over a decade. Consolidation at the top, restructuring in the middle, and bold innovation at the edges have reshaped the industry’s horizons. At the same time, regulators, brand owners and recyclers have inched closer to a new circular operating model, even as policy clarity remains elusive.