HYDRAULICS Pressure Hydraulic & Controls was asked to quote on replacing an existing 22-year-old hydraulic power unit for a refractory plant. The hydraulics run a dual-purpose system, one is to operate a special pendulum cylinder that controls the crushing force of raw Magnesium Oxide that is being ground down on a conveyor system into a usable powder and the other is to lubricate the cylinder due to the large amounts of heat generated by the manufacturing process. Several other companies had declined to quote due to the nature of the environment and general lack of information on both the existing hydraulics and the electrical controls that were in place. A photocopy of the original hand typed system overview sheet and a photocopy of a barely legible circuit were provided by the customer as the only source of information, but they had no electrical schematics available but knew they did not have any PLC controls in place. The customer’s one major requirement that was repeatedly mentioned was that the new HPU had to be ’Plug & Play’ to keep downtime to an absolute minimum when the new unit was installed. One of Pressure Hydraulic & Controls’ field engineers went to site to carry out an initial assessment and get an overview of what might be involved. While onsite the engineer gathered as much information about the fitted components, but due to the age of much of the equipment, many part numbers either were not visible or were now obsolete making the customers ‘Plug & Play’ request even more of a challenge. While onsite it was discovered that the filter elements had been removed from the main pressure filters ‘as they keep getting blocked and slowing production down’, so they were removed. What information could be gathered was passed to the company’s sales team for review for them to put a costing together to be able to quote the customer. With a large degree of guesswork, the customer was quoted, and an order received from them at which point the project was passed to the design team. Pressure Hydraulic & Controls’ Group Design Manager then went to visit the site and get a better understanding of the project, meet the customer, get their full wish list from them, and conduct a more detailed site survey. While carrying out the survey, the customer mentioned they would also like to future proof the system and may want to add full automated PLC control in the future so any of the sensors must not only be backwards compatible, they must also be able to work with any new PLC if it was ever implemented and they also wanted additional sensors to monitor the water usage for the cooling loop and oil temperature before and after the cooler, adding to the ‘Plug & Play’ challenge that was quickly becoming a nightmare. The customer also showed him where they wanted the unit that meant the company had limited space to make the Twenty-two-year-old hydraulic power unit replaced to enhance efficiency and reliability A refractory plant needed to replace a 22-year-old hydraulic power unit. H&P takes a look at the challenges and solutions the company faced. 28 HYDRAULICS & PNEUMATICS June 2024 www.hpmag.co.uk The original hydraulic panel with the oil reservoir sunken into a pit in the floor under the unit in the right of the photo.
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