• A portable compressed air leakage analyser, which doesn’t require host machine reprogramming has been designed and built in Australia by SMC Corporation.
    A portable compressed air leakage analyser, which doesn’t require host machine reprogramming has been designed and built in Australia by SMC Corporation.
Close×

A portable compressed air leakage analyser, which doesn’t require host machine reprogramming has been designed and built in Australia by SMC Corporation.

SMC’s Energy Corporation Group, formed in 2015, develops and integrates technologies to reduce energy use and costs for the manufacturing sector. With direction from the group’s ANZ manager Bill Blyth and the Sydney-based team including project engineer Alex Bonella and mechanical engineer Tim Ho, the analyser was commissioned and exported to a global food manufacturer in Dubai. 

According to SMC, the plug-and-play solution can be easily installed and is used to manage and monitor the host machine while calculating air consumption for the predetermined pneumatic application.

Blyth said: “Finding and assessing individual leakage in a compressed air system can be costly and time consuming. This analyser makes use of a SMC monitoring technology to identify the location and volume for individual leaks; both static and dynamic.

“A bonus is the ability to also carry out consumption and usage profile analysis for the machine during operation – without the need to reprogram the host machine or process. This is the real time and labour-saving aspect.”

The analyser develops and provides a file detailing all measured leaks and other relevant compressed air data and costs, allowing detailed machine maintenance analysis.

“This truly is a gamechanger for manufacturers. It allows our customers to make informed decisions about easily identifying and prioritising when there is need to repair a leak and what the real value is to your business,” Blyth said.

The Compressed Air Leakage Analyser is now available for both local and global applications.

 

Packaging News

The ACCC has instituted court proceedings against Clorox Australia, owner of GLAD-branded kitchen and garbage bags, over alleged false claims that bags were partly made of recycled 'ocean plastic'.

In news that is disappointing but not surprising given the recent reports on the unfolding Qenos saga, the new owner of Qenos has placed the company into voluntary administration. The closure of the Qenos Botany facility has also been confirmed.

An agreement struck between Cleanaway and Viva Energy will see the two companies undertake a prefeasibility assessment of a circular solution for soft plastics and other hard-to-recycle plastics.