Hello, I have a question, I want to buy equipment like this to empty my zeppelin (blimp) and return the helium into the cylinder! Is it possible to do this with this equipment? Or does it just transfer from one cylinder to another? thank you very much!
Since no one answered: There's always a minimum inlet pressure requirement on those, usually around 5-10 bar for boosters like that. It means that booster like that won't be able to "take air out" that's bellow 5 bar. To my understanding, in case of zeplins, the pressure is way below that mark so booster like that wouldn't work as they're designed for high pressure systems like scuba tanks. You can potentially find one that does that but I'm not aware of one. Additionally, if you're buying helium from a supplier, usually the tanks have 1 way valve build in to prevent you from refilling those yourself so you'd have to verify that too. Lastly, there's running cost to consider. On top of a booster you'd need a source of compressed air of around 8-10 bar. A decent shop compressor with enough flow would work but if you account for a running cost of that compressor (electricity + maintenance) will you actually save more helium that it will cost you. Especially since depending on the size of the zeplin, you might barely have enough helium to get the system up to pressure (there's always some gas loss when transferring due to gas in lines, valves, etc.)
Hello, I have a question, I want to buy equipment like this to empty my zeppelin (blimp) and return the helium into the cylinder! Is it possible to do this with this equipment? Or does it just transfer from one cylinder to another? thank you very much!
Hi, Booster pumps are designed in such a way that they require an inlet pressure of approx. 5 bar upwards. Unlike the usual high-pressure compressors which suck in atmospheric air. Yes, theoretically they can, but they are very inefficient
지금 화면에 나오는 부스터의 가격은 어떻게 되고 어디에서 구매 할수 있습니까?
nrc-international.com/en/collections/tec-booster
What should the booster drive pressure be? I can't understand.
Hi Sahin, the drive pressure should be depends on the Model between 2 and 10 bar
@@stefanwei5507 Thank you for the answer.❤️
Hello, I have a question, I want to buy equipment like this to empty my zeppelin (blimp) and return the helium into the cylinder! Is it possible to do this with this equipment? Or does it just transfer from one cylinder to another? thank you very much!
Since no one answered:
There's always a minimum inlet pressure requirement on those, usually around 5-10 bar for boosters like that.
It means that booster like that won't be able to "take air out" that's bellow 5 bar. To my understanding, in case of zeplins, the pressure is way below that mark so booster like that wouldn't work as they're designed for high pressure systems like scuba tanks.
You can potentially find one that does that but I'm not aware of one.
Additionally, if you're buying helium from a supplier, usually the tanks have 1 way valve build in to prevent you from refilling those yourself so you'd have to verify that too.
Lastly, there's running cost to consider. On top of a booster you'd need a source of compressed air of around 8-10 bar. A decent shop compressor with enough flow would work but if you account for a running cost of that compressor (electricity + maintenance) will you actually save more helium that it will cost you. Especially since depending on the size of the zeplin, you might barely have enough helium to get the system up to pressure (there's always some gas loss when transferring due to gas in lines, valves, etc.)
Hello, I have a question, I want to buy equipment like this to empty my zeppelin (blimp) and return the helium into the cylinder! Is it possible to do this with this equipment? Or does it just transfer from one cylinder to another? thank you very much!
Hi, Booster pumps are designed in such a way that they require an inlet pressure of approx. 5 bar upwards. Unlike the usual high-pressure compressors which suck in atmospheric air. Yes, theoretically they can, but they are very inefficient