Instrument air and pneumatic controls for hazardous-area service, where reliability is safety.
In oil and gas, compressed air runs the controls, not just the tools. Clean, dry instrument air strokes valve actuators, drives pneumatic positioners, and replaces gas-bleed devices at wellheads and compressor stations. When the air fails, the safety logic fails — so the spec is dryness to a deep dew point, redundancy, and equipment rated for the hazardous area it sits in.
SPC's distributor-first model fits because no single brand covers the whole train across upstream, midstream, and downstream service. We pair the compressor, the desiccant dryer that holds −40°F PDP in cold climates, the ATEX/IECEx-rated valves and instruments, and the point-of-use filtration from the brand strongest at each stage — and your local distributor stocks the spares that keep the station from going down.
Control air is specified to ISA-S7.0.01: a pressure dew point at least 18°F below the lowest ambient, oil-free, and particle-filtered to 40 micron or finer. It is a different, tighter spec than the plant's general utility air.
Most instrument-air systems run a regenerative desiccant dryer to −40°F PDP so the air never condenses or freezes in an outdoor line or a positioner. Refrigerated drying bottoms out near +38°F PDP — nowhere near cold enough for field service.
Equipment in a classified zone must carry the matching rating — ATEX, IECEx, or Class I Div 1/2 — for the gas group and temperature class on site. An unrated solenoid or drain in a Div 1 area is a rejected install, not a substitution.
Pneumatic actuators stroke the control and shutdown valves, and spring-return actuators fail the valve to its safe position on loss of air. The air system is part of the safety case, so it is sized for redundancy, not just average demand.
A trace of moisture that is harmless indoors will freeze a pneumatic line, plug a drain, or lock an actuator at a winter wellhead. Deep desiccant drying plus heat-traced or freeze-protected drops is the standard answer, not an upgrade.
Operators are converting gas-driven pneumatic devices to instrument air to cut methane venting and meet emissions rules. That conversion adds a compressor, dryer, and distribution package where pipeline gas used to do the work for free.
Instrument air feeds the controls — if the only dryer trips, the whole station loses its control medium. Critical service runs redundant drying and backup air (or a stored-air receiver) so a single component never takes the plant down.
Hover any standard for what it controls. These are the certs that decide which dryer, filter, and lubricant make the cut.
Two systems, kept separate. Compressed air on the left, pneumatic automation on the right. Each card carries how the product fits in Oil & Gas / Energy.
Wellhead air, remote pump-jack pneumatic control air, oilfield service rigs. Often no grid power, often very humid ambient. Deliquescent runs on the compressor itself with no additional service required; tablet reorder is the only ongoing logistics.
Most refinery process unit boundaries are classified Class 1 Division 1 or Division 2 throughout, with the central control room and offsite utility areas non-classified. Instrument air and plant air systems serving the unit need explosion-proof drying if the dryer is located inside the classified area; the alternative is locating the dryer in the non-classified utility area and piping rated air into the unit.
Magnetic-float preferred for the no-electronics-to-fail design. Robust under vibration, dust, and temperature swing.
Send the conditions and the constraint. We size the system, name the tiers, and tell you what attaches on the quote.
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