A condensate polisher for a district heating plant in Michigan was shipped last week. Dual Skid-Mounted Condensate Polisher for District Heating Plant in Michigan Customer: Utility District Heating Water treatment application: Condensate Polisher to scavenge trace hardness and iron Expected savings: Loss prevention keeping heat transfer surfaces clean and reliable for years of trouble …
Many companies are on a constant quest to run their business in the most energy-conscious, money-saving way possible. For those whose operations involve a low-pressure boiler system environment, investing in a condensate polisher is one of the easiest ways to “get greener†through energy efficiency and dollar savings. In most every boiler plant, cold water …
While dirty condensate clean-up can be an energy buster in most processing plants, one cost effective solution is to polish contaminated condensate for re-use. Condensate polishers use a simple ion exchange technology that is easy to operate, easy to maintain and economical to use – less make-up water is required which leads to lower chemical …
Reuse It – Don’t Lose It! The Economics of Condensate Polishing was presented at the GlobalSpec Industrial Processing virtual tradeshow on August 25, 2010. It is a rather long presentation so we posted in two pieces on YouTube. Abstract of Presentation: In today’s environment of economic pressure and high energy costs, engineers are constantly asked …
As I alerted in a previous post, Kevin Preising of Res-Kem gave a webcast entitled “Reuse It or Lose It – The Economics of Condensate Polishing”. This excellent webcast was given at the GlobalSpec Industrial Processing virtual trade show on August 25 showing how a condensate polisher can pay for itself in 9.6 months! You …
On August 25, 2010, Res-Kem’s Kevin Preising will make a presentation entitled “Reuse It – Don’t Lose It! The Economics of Condensate Polishing” as part of the Industrial Processing on line tradeshow presented by GlobalSpec. Abstract of Presentation: In today’s environment of economic pressure and high energy costs, engineers are constantly asked to do more …