Enhanced System Reliability
With their self-maintaining properties, these filters ensure consistent removal of contaminants, preventing clogging and extending the lifespan of downstream equipment. This enhances the overall reliability of the filtration system.
When to Use a Self-Cleaning Filter
Here are the clear steps to use the self-cleaning filter:
Your process runs continuously and can’t afford stoppages
If your system runs 24 hours a day, water treatment, power generation, industrial cooling, stopping to service a filter isn’t really an option. Self-cleaning filters deal with maintenance themselves. You don’t have to schedule around them or pull operators off other jobs to do it.
You’re changing cartridge or bag filters more than once a day
Frequent change-outs add up fast, consumable cost, labour cost, and a contamination risk every time you crack the housing open. If you’re doing that daily, the volume of solids in your stream has outgrown what a manual filter can handle. Switching to a self-cleaning design removes all three costs at once.
Downtime carries a compliance cost, not just a production cost
In food, pharma, and chemical manufacturing, stopping to clean a filter means logging it, validating the restart, and potentially holding a batch. Self-cleaning disc and scraper filters are built to run for extended periods without operator input. Service intervals are typically measured in years, not shifts, which matters a lot when every planned stop needs paperwork to go with it.
Selecting the right self cleaning strainers requires careful consideration of several factors
Firstly, it is important to assess the specific filtration requirements and identify the type of contaminants or particles that need to be removed from the process fluid. This will help determine the appropriate filtration size and design.
Secondly, evaluating the flow rate and pressure of the application is critical. The strainer’s maximum pressure rating should align with the system requirements to ensure optimal performance and safety.
Another factor to consider is the desired filtration efficiency. This will depend on the level of purity required for the process fluid and the industry standards that need to be met.
The self cleaning mechanism should also be evaluated. Different strainers use different methods such as backwashing, mechanical scraping, or ultrasonic cleaning. Choose the mechanism that best suits the application and ensures thorough and efficient cleaning.
Material compatibility is another important consideration. The strainer materials should be compatible with the process fluid to avoid corrosion or contamination issues.