ELGi Equipments Australia launches Air~Alert
ELGi recently announced the introduction of Air~Alert, an IoT-based Air Compressor Monitoring System, for the Australian market. This smart 24/7 remote monitoring and alert system is now available to ELGi’s customers in Australia for new and existing installations*.
A data transmission and analysis service, Air~Alert monitors critical parameters, and sends out insights and alerts to users. With these insights, customers can improve uptime and maximise efficiency with smart monitoring and data related to air compressor performance. The service also enables customers to act in time and avoid potential failures. Additionally, Air~Alert enables 24/7 remote monitoring of the air compressor. It delivers trend graphs and information about operating parameters, including discharge pressure, oil temperature, variable frequency drive (VFD) speed (where fitted), total running hours, trips, and alerts on a live online interface accessible remotely from anywhere in the world.
Air~Alert can also notify Pulford and the customer about scheduled maintenance and fault occurrences while predicting commonly occurring failures. Monthly summary reports on overall health and operating parameters, including upcoming service requirements and preventative maintenance based on the data obtained, can then be sent to customers.
Air~Alert gathers the operational and performance data from the compressor controller, it is then transmitted in an encrypted form, and sent to secure and dedicated Air~Alert servers in the cloud. Smart algorithms then work on the data to enable intelligent prediction with actionable alerts, reports, and trends – which are returned securely to the operators as easy-to-read actionable dashboards.
*The Air~Alert device can be factory-fitted on new ELGi EG, AB, and OF Series compressors or retrofitted on units with a Neuron III, III+, or IV controller.
Discover ELGi Air~Alert – click here for product information
Read the full press release issued by ELGi Equipments Australia here