by Karan Dargode | Jan 10, 2023 | Blogs
How ID Fans Work in Industrial Draft Systems An ID fan, or induced draft fan, works by creating controlled negative pressure at the outlet side of a boiler, furnace, kiln, dryer, scrubber, bag filter, or process exhaust system. It does not mainly “push” fresh air into...
by Karan Dargode | Jan 10, 2023 | Blogs
The main difference between a centrifugal ID fan and an axial flow fan is how they move air or gas against system resistance. A centrifugal fan changes airflow direction and builds higher static pressure, making it more suitable for boilers, furnaces, scrubbers, bag...
by Karan Dargode | Jan 10, 2023 | Blogs
ID fan servicing and maintenance should never be treated as only cleaning the fan body once in a while. In boilers, furnaces, kilns, bag filters, scrubbers, dryers, and pollution-control systems, an ID fan works under real plant stress: hot gas, dust load, negative...
by Karan Dargode | Jan 10, 2023 | Blogs
Choosing an ID fan is not only about CFM, motor HP, or duct size. A proper ID fan selection starts with the actual duty condition: airflow, static pressure, gas temperature, dust load, gas composition, duct resistance, impeller type, material of construction, motor...
by Karan Dargode | Jan 10, 2023 | Blogs
ID fans, also called induced draft fans, are industrial fans used to pull flue gas, hot air, fumes, dust-laden air, or process exhaust through a system by creating negative pressure. In many plants, the ID fan sits after the boiler, furnace, dryer, kiln, scrubber, bag...