The Smartest Way to Stop Wasting Compressed Air

The most efficient way to use compressed air is simple: turn it off when you don’t need it. While engineered blow-off tools drastically lower utility demands, running them continuously across empty conveyor belts or during line pauses still drains valuable factory resources. The EXAIR Electronic Flow Control (EFC) eliminates this waste by pairing a precision photoelectric sensor with an advanced timing control module.

By automatically shutting down the air supply the moment a part passes, the EFC limits compressed air consumption strictly to active processing windows. This plug-and-play optimization system integrates directly into existing lines without complex PLC programming or wiring, offering a direct path to slashing energy bills.

Core Operational Benefits of the EXAIR EFC

Implementing automated flow regulation provides immediate operational improvements:

  • Drastic Cost Reductions: Shutting off air during gaps between parts can easily reduce air consumption by 50% to 75% or more, frequently generating thousands in annual factory utility savings.
  • Plug-and-Play Simplicity: The standalone system features a pre-wired NEMA 4 / IP66 polycarbonate enclosure, a 9-foot power cord, and a universal 100-240VAC electrical input.
  • Industrial-Grade Reliability: The compact sensor resists water and dust, boasts superior immunity to electrical noise, and accurately identifies targets up to 3 feet (1 meter) away.
  • 8 Versatile Timing Modes: An integrated analog timer supports eight distinct operations—including on/off delays, flickers, intervals, and “one-shot” pulsing—with time constraints adjustable from 0.10 seconds up to 120 hours.
  • Scalable Flow Ranges: Available across four distinct model sizes to efficiently regulate lines from 40 SCFM up to 350 SCFM via rugged, high-capacity solenoid valves.

Two Automated Applications: The EFC in Action

The true utility of the EFC is unlocked when paired with EXAIR’s Intelligent Compressed Air product family. Below are three common plant configurations utilizing the EFC alongside different EXAIR tools to optimize production.

1. Intermittent Part Drying with the Super Air Knife

When washed parts travel down a conveyor with uneven gaps between batches, running a continuous air stream wastes significant energy.

  • The Setup: A Super Air Knife is mounted over the conveyor line, plumbed through the EFC’s solenoid valve. The photoelectric sensor is positioned just upstream of the knife.
  • The Operation: The EFC is set to Signal On/Off Delay mode. When a part triggers the sensor, the solenoid instantly opens, unleashing a uniform sheet of laminar air to sweep moisture away. As soon as the part clears the sensor, the timer counts down a brief delay to finish the wipe, then snaps the valve shut until the next part arrives.

2. Automated Hopper Replenishment with the Line Vac

Line Vacs can convey many things.

Keeping raw materials flowing into a molding hopper manually can lead to structural overflows or costly machine starvation.

  • The Setup: An air-operated EXAIR Line Vac is installed to convey bulk plastic pellets or grains directly into a manufacturing hopper. The EFC photoelectric sensor is positioned at a designated low-level threshold inside the hopper wall.
  • The Operation: The EFC uses an Inverse Sensing or Delay profile. When the product drops below the sensor line, indicating the hopper is nearly empty, the EFC opens the solenoid valve to power the Line Vac. The vacuum transfers materials smoothly until the timer reaches its preset fill duration (or a secondary high-level sensor is cleared), halting the air supply precisely when replenishment completes.

Stop Paying for Empty Space

Relying on continuously running blow-offs means your plant is actively paying to compress air that blows into empty space. Integrating the EXAIR Electronic Flow Control lets you transition from costly manual oversight to true, targeted automation.

Ready to figure out exactly how much you can save? Check the EXAIR EFC Savings Calculator to input your plant’s specific cycle times, calculate your exact payback period, and start optimizing your workspace efficiency.

Al Wooffitt
Application Engineer

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