Product News
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By AdminThe Hidden Cost of Pneumatic Energy Loss: How PU Tubes Improve Efficiency by 15%+Compressed air runs a ton of factories. It's everywhere in automation, packaging, assembly lines. But here's the kicker—most plants bleed air without noticing. Leaks eat up energy. Bills climb. Production slows down quietly. Industry folks know the drill. The U.S. Department of Energy pegs average leaks at 20-30% of total compressed air output. Some spots hit 40% or worse. That means compressors run harder and longer. Electricity costs stack up fast. A single 1/8-inch leak at 100 PSI? Easily $2,500 a year gone. Multiply that across dozens of spots. Ouch. Managers chase big-ticket savings. New compressors. Variable drives. Yet…
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By AdminHow to Choose the Right PU Pneumatic Tube Size and Pressure Rating for Your ApplicationEver stared at a pneumatic setup that's barely limping along? It wastes air. It risks sudden stops. Picking the wrong PU pneumatic tube often causes those headaches. The system runs inefficiently. Sometimes safety takes a hit too. I've watched it happen plenty. Tubes kink under load. Flow gets choked. Downtime piles up fast. That's exactly why nailing the size and pressure rating counts so much. This guide breaks it down simply. We'll cover practical steps. You'll see formulas. A handy pressure table appears too. Real tips come from everyday setups. We'll highlight smart options from Aisili. Share your details.…
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By AdminThe Ultimate Guide to Bend Radius, Flexibility & Longevity of PU Pneumatic TubingIn automated setups where space gets cramped and pieces keep shifting around, choosing the proper pneumatic tubing can seriously affect how well everything runs. Polyurethane pneumatic tubing—commonly shortened to PU tubing—really stands out. It deals with sharp turns, nonstop flexing, and long stretches of use without kinking up or splitting early. Folks working on robotics, drag chains, pick-and-place machines, or conveyor lines often pick PU because it strikes a nice balance between being tough and staying bendy. This guide takes a close look at the main things that matter: bend radius, flexibility, and how long the stuff actually lasts. We’ll…
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By AdminHow TPEE Anti-Spark Tubing Improves Workplace Safety and Reduces DowntimeWelding stations spark constantly. Hot metal flies. One stray spark hits a regular air line, and boom—tube melts or catches fire. The line shuts down. Crews scramble for emergency fixes. Production stops cold. That kind of mess racks up hours of lost time and piles on repair bills. TPEE anti-spark tubing flips the script. Built tough with flame-retardant properties, it shrugs off those hot spatters. No melting. No ignition. Just steady air flow to keep tools and actuators humming. In spots where safety rules tight and every minute matters, this tubing steps up big. It meets tough flame standards like UL94…
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By AdminHow Ester-Based PU Tubing Improves Automation Line ReliabilityImagine a busy factory floor. Robots move fast. Conveyors run without stopping. Packaging machines seal boxes quickly. Then everything halts. Why? One air line splits. That kind of stoppage hurts. It can cost thousands every hour. Ester-based PU tubing changes that picture. This sturdy, bendy material keeps pneumatic systems going strong. It cuts those costly breaks. It boosts how dependable the whole line stays. In industrial automation, seconds add up fast. Picking the right tubing matters a lot. Let's look at how ester-based PU tubing really helps. We'll cover what it is, its strengths, and where it works best. What Is…
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By AdminOEM Sizing Guide How to Select the Perfect IDOD for Your Automated EquipmentHey there, fellow OEM designers and engineers. If you're knee-deep in automating production lines or tweaking robotic setups, you know that picking the right pneumatic tubing can make or break your system's performance. We're talking about Flexcoil PU Tubing here – that coiled stuff that keeps air flowing smoothly without getting in the way. This guide walks you through nailing the inner diameter (ID) and outer diameter (OD) for your gear. We'll stick to the OEM size range from 3mm to 25mm, pulling from real spec tables to help you match airflow needs and fittings. No fluff, just solid advice to…


