Compressed Air Systems Built Around Your Application

Understand what your system needs, avoid common mistakes, and make informed decisions before problems affect production.

If you are evaluating, planning, or experiencing issues with a compressed air system, the problem is rarely isolated

Compressed air systems are often treated as individual pieces of equipment. In practice, performance is determined by how the system is designed and how air is used throughout the operation.

Moisture, pressure instability, equipment issues, and rising energy costs are not isolated problems. They are symptoms of a system that does not match the application.

Whether you are planning a new system or trying to correct an existing one, the focus should be on how the system functions as a whole.

TRI works with you to define the right system based on your application and operating conditions.

What Are You Experiencing or Evaluating?

Start with your situation. Each path addresses common problems and decisions based on how compressed air is used.

System Performance Issues

Moisture, unstable pressure, equipment issues, or inconsistent operation are often symptoms of system design or air quality problems.

Determining the Right System Size

Sizing based on previous equipment or assumptions often leads to inefficient or unstable systems. Understanding demand is critical.

Selecting the Right Equipment

Compressors, dryers, and filtration must work together. Misalignment between components leads to performance issues.

Setting Up Air for New Equipment

Air requirements depend on how it interacts with equipment and product. System design must reflect your specific application.

Describe Your System or Application

Provide a few details about your equipment, usage, or current issue. This allows for a more accurate assessment of your situation.

We typically respond within one business day.

Compressed Air Should Support Your Operation—Not Disrupt It

If compressed air is affecting performance, increasing operating cost, or creating uncertainty, the issue is typically how the system is configured—not just the equipment itself.

A clear understanding of your system allows for better decisions and more reliable operation.