Distributor project support ยท 2026-06-30
Air Compressor Electrical and Ambient Condition Checklist
Electrical and ambient details affect compressor selection before the buyer reaches the quotation stage. A distributor should collect the site power supply, operating environment, airflow path, and installation limits early so the factory can review the project without guessing.
Quick answer
Record voltage, frequency, phase, available breaker capacity, cable route, room temperature, ventilation path, dust level, humidity, floor condition, access space, and whether the compressor room has any heat or airflow restriction.
Confirm power before model discussion
Ask the buyer for voltage, frequency, phase, and any plant electrical limits before comparing models. If the site power is unclear, the project should be marked for electrical confirmation instead of forcing a model choice.
Check the room environment
Compressor rooms can contain heat, dust, blocked airflow, or limited service space. Record these conditions in plain language and add photos when possible, because they affect the review even when the machine name looks correct.
Separate site work from equipment scope
Cable work, ventilation changes, piping, foundations, and unloading arrangements may not be part of the equipment scope. List them separately so the buyer knows what must be planned locally.
Keep unresolved details visible
If the buyer cannot confirm a condition, write it as an open item. A clear open-item list is safer than hiding assumptions inside a quotation conversation.
FAQ
Why collect room temperature before selection?
Room temperature and airflow can affect project review, especially when ventilation or heat removal is limited.
Should uncertain electrical data be guessed?
No. Unknown voltage, phase, or breaker information should stay open until the buyer confirms it.
Information checked
Last reviewed: 2026-06-30.
Boundary: This guide supports early project screening and distributor communication. It is not a model-specific quotation, price sheet, certification statement, warranty promise, delivery commitment, or local-service claim.