Industries We Serve
Compressed Air Expertise in Industries Most Consultants Have Never Seen
Peak kW has logged data inside compressor rooms that most compressed air consultants will never walk into. Ski resorts at 10,000 feet. Waste-to-energy plants running pollution controls 24/7. Legacy firearms factories with a century of production history. Every one of these environments demands compressed air engineering that is specific to the application, not pulled from a textbook.
Ski Areas & Mountain Resorts
Compressed air at altitude is a different game. We know, because we ski these mountains too.
Ski resorts rely on compressed air for snowmaking systems, lift maintenance and vehicle shops. But the physics of altitude change everything about how a compressor performs.
At 8,000 to 11,000 feet, air density drops 20-30% compared to sea level. That means a compressor rated at 500 CFM at the factory delivers significantly less at your mountain. Most resort maintenance teams know their equipment struggles in cold, thin air, but nobody has actually measured how much capacity they are losing or what it is costing them.
Beyond capacity derating, instrumentation behaves differently at altitude. Pressure gauges, flow meters, and dewpoint sensors all need altitude correction to produce accurate readings. A compressed air assessment at a ski area that does not account for elevation is generating bad data from the start.
Peak kW brings calibrated, altitude-corrected instrumentation and engineering calculations that account for your actual operating elevation, temperature extremes, and seasonal demand swings between summer maintenance and peak snowmaking season.
Key Challenges at Altitude
- Elevation Derating
20-30% capacity loss at 8,000-11,000 ft that most systems are never sized for - Instrumentation Accuracy
Pressure, flow, and dewpoint readings require altitude correction for valid data - Extreme Temperature Swings
From -20F winter operation to 90F summer maintenance cycles - Seasonal Demand Variation
Snowmaking peak vs. summer maintenance creates radically different load profiles - Remote Compressor Locations
Mid-mountain and base area compressor rooms with limited access and harsh conditions
Waste-to-Energy & Pollution Controls
When your compressed air system fails, your pollution controls go offline. And the regulators notice.
Waste-to-energy facilities are some of the most compressed-air-intensive operations in the industrial world. Compressed air drives critical pollution control systems including spray dryer absorbers (SDAs), baghouse pulse-jet cleaning, ammonia injection for NOx control, and continuous emissions monitoring instrumentation.
The consequences of compressed air failure in this environment are not just operational. They are regulatory. When an SDA loses air pressure, lime slurry injection stops. When baghouse pulse valves cannot fire, particulate emissions spike. When CEMS analyzers lose their instrument air supply, you lose your emissions data, and regulators treat missing data as a violation.
Peak kW has extensive experience assessing compressed air systems in waste-to-energy plants. We understand the relationship between your air system and your pollution control equipment, and we engineer solutions that prioritize the reliability your permits require. Every recommendation accounts for the fact that in this industry, compressed air downtime is not just expensive. It can shut down the entire plant.
Critical Air Demand Points
- Spray Dryer Absorbers (SDAs)
Atomization air for lime slurry injection. Pressure and flow stability directly controls acid gas removal efficiency - Baghouse Pulse-Jet Cleaning
High-volume, intermittent demand for bag cleaning cycles. Undersized storage causes incomplete cleaning and premature bag failure - CEMS Instrument Air
Continuous emissions monitoring requires clean, dry, oil-free air 24/7. Any interruption means lost data and potential permit violations - Ammonia/Urea Injection (SCR/SNCR)
Compressed air atomization for NOx reduction reagent injection systems - Ash Handling & Conveying
Pneumatic conveying of fly ash and bottom ash requires sustained high-volume airflow
Firearms Manufacturing
Legacy factories. Precision tolerances. Compressed air systems that have evolved one machine at a time for decades.
New England is home to some of the oldest and most iconic firearms manufacturers in the country. These are factories with over a century of production history, where compressed air systems have grown organically through decades of expansion, new product lines, and equipment additions. The result is often a patchwork of compressors, dryers, piping, and controls that no single person fully understands.
Peak kW has worked inside major firearms manufacturing plants across the region. We understand the mix of CNC machining, gun drilling, broaching, heat treating, bluing and finishing, and assembly operations that define these facilities. Each process has different compressed air requirements for pressure, flow, and quality, and the legacy piping rarely delivers what the machines actually need.
Gun drilling operations alone can consume enormous volumes of compressed air for chip evacuation and coolant delivery. Finishing lines require clean, dry air to prevent surface defects. Assembly pneumatics need stable pressure for consistent torque and fit. And the entire system has to work together in buildings that were built when compressed air was an afterthought.
We bring modern data logging and engineering analysis to these legacy systems and find savings hiding in the complexity. Typical findings include compressors fighting each other without proper sequencing, pressure set points that were raised years ago to compensate for distribution problems that were never fixed, and leaks that have become background noise in a loud factory.
What We Find in Legacy Gun Factories
- Gun Drilling Air Demand
High-volume chip evacuation and coolant delivery consuming far more CFM than the system was originally designed for - Legacy Piping Networks
Decades of additions, dead legs, undersized mains, and corroded fittings creating hidden pressure losses throughout the plant - Finishing Line Air Quality
Bluing, Parkerizing, and coating operations requiring clean, dry air to prevent surface contamination and rework - Competing Compressor Controls
Multiple compressors from different eras running without coordinated sequencing, wasting energy and fighting each other - Assembly Pneumatics
Torque tools, presses, and automated fixtures requiring stable, repeatable pressure for consistent fit and function
The Experience to Work Where Others Cannot
Peak kW does not limit itself to standard industrial facilities. If your operation runs on compressed air, we have the engineering depth and field experience to assess it, optimize it, and prove the savings with metered data.
423+
Projects Completed
16+
Years Experience
$80K-$180K
Typical Annual Savings
3rd Gen
Industry Heritage
Your Industry Is Not Too Specialized. We Have Probably Been There.
10-minute call. No obligation. Tell us what you are running and we will tell you whether we can help. Utility incentives often cover 50-100% of the assessment cost.