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Methods to Assure a Successful Dust Collection System

Article-Methods to Assure a Successful Dust Collection System

Jack Osborn, senior project engineer, Airdusco Engineering and Design Services LLC
Jack Osborn, senior project engineer, Airdusco Engineering and Design Services LLC

On Tuesday, August 13, 2019 at @ pm Eastern/11 am Pacific, Jack Osborn, senior project engineer, Airdusco Engineering and Design Services LLC, will present "Methods to Assure a Successful Dust Collection System" as part of Powder & Bulk Solids DryPro webinar series.
 
Far too often expensive dust collection systems are ineffective and a constant maintenance problem. Osborn has found through 43+ years of designing, providing, and trouble-shooting dust collection systems that by applying certain essential standards the results will be a long-term reliable and effective system. This webinar course will present and explain these essential standards for a successful dust collection system.   
 
Attend this webinar and learn:
  • Why the vast majority of dust collection systems are ineffective and a major source of maintenance problems.
  • How to use certain basic succesful results when considering these systems ranging in installed cost from $100,000 to many millions of dollars. 
  • Why Ignoring basic requirements will lead to failure and end with combustible dusts, a significant increase in the likelihood of a combustible dust event.
  • What a successful dust collection system is and how basic essentials combined with common sense and proven engineering practices can be applied to new and existing dust collection systems.
Osborn has 44+ years-experience in the concept, design, project management, start-up, and operations/maintenance for an extensive range of mechanical equipment systems, including dust collection, ventilation, bulk-handling mechanical systems (pneumatic and mechanical), storage weighing, mixing, batching, etc. He is also a member of all six NFPA committees on combustible dusts (61, 484, 652, 654, 664, and Correlating).
 
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