Differences between Air Cooled and Water Cooled Yanmar Compressors

Blog | August 27th, 2018

Choosing between an air-cooled or water-cooled Yanmar compressor, as described in this post, boat owners have learned to equip their vessels with powerful and reliable auxiliary machines. We’re revisiting this subject, which means we’re putting the two cooling technologies back under the microscope. The goal is to definitively illustrate the differences that exist between air and water cooled marine compressors. Without further ado, here comes the first difference, and it’s a big one.

Flywheel Fan Cooling 

This air-cooled machine doesn’t have a large radiator, so where’s the cooling medium stored? Here’s a clue, look at the engine flywheel. Storing a Yanmar compressor’s energy as radial momentum, the compressor flywheel is also serving a second purpose. It’s running at speed as a compressor cooling mechanism. Essentially, marine equipment can become large and unwieldy, but that dual-purpose engine architecture keeps the equipment compact by assigning the Yanmar marine compressor’s duties to an already fast-moving engine component. After all, high-performance compressors, those capable of serving many shipboard applications, can’t escape this byproduct. The very act of squeezing air into a smaller space is enough to generate component-fatiguing heat.

Radiator Cooled Yanmar Compressors 

Sporting a cooling tank, water-cooled Yanmar compressors employ hoppers or radiators as the primary cooling medium. They’re available in horizontal or vertical cooling configurations. Predictably, water-cooled models cost a little more than their air-cooled cousins. That’s because there are more supplementary components to add, unlike the flywheel powered air coolers. For instance, there’s a cooling tank mounted at the top of water-cooled compressors. They use gravity and pumps to rapidly get the cool water where it’s needed. Then there are radiator fins, tubes, and numerous other components to maintain. Sometimes, when the option is available, water-cooled equipment can even use the vast cooling liquid that lays all around the ship. Larger compressors use this tap-in to suck up this never-ending source of water from oceans and lakes.

By the numbers, air-cooled compressors, those that exist in the Yanmar catalogue, tend to use direct combustion technology. Water-cooled models stick to indirect combustion. Of more interest, however, water-cooled equipment delivers larger displacement values, which begin at around 0.493 and peak at 0.583. And those higher output ratings run across the board because water is a more effective cooling medium. As far as air-cooling principles go, the engine room or plant room containing the machinery must be well ventilated. Water-cooled equipment isn’t limited in this way. As long as the radiator or hopper is full and the tank gauge is high, compact water-cooled Yanmar compressors will easily dismiss their thermal loads.

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