Pitfalls #1 – Gas temperature at start-up

Gas temperature at start-up: why it distorts fan selection

“But we provided the correct operating conditions…”

This is a sentence we hear frequently after a difficult commissioning.
On paper, everything looked right: the fan was selected for the nominal operating conditions. Yet at start-up, the motor trips or the absorbed current exceeds the limits.

In most cases, the root cause is the same: transient operating conditions, and especially gas temperature at start-up, were not considered.

The classic pitfall: focusing only on steady-state operation

Most fan inquiries include:

  • airflow,
  • pressure losses,
  • nominal gas temperature.

That makes sense — but it is often incomplete.
In many industrial processes, the fan does not start under nominal conditions.

At start-up, the gas is usually:

  • colder,
  • and therefore denser.

This difference has a direct impact on fan behavior.

Why a lower temperature matters

At constant speed, higher gas density results in:

  • higher developed pressure,
  • higher absorbed power,
  • and therefore a real risk of motor overload.

A fan that is perfectly suited for nominal operation may become electrically out of limits at start-up, simply because the actual gas temperature was overlooked.

👉 The gas temperature at start-up, and more broadly transient operating conditions, are not a detail.

The supplier’s role… and the importance of context

A good supplier will be able to guide you through this reasoning and challenge the data.
But this is only possible if the initial request provides enough context.

A selection based solely on nominal conditions limits the ability to:

  • anticipate critical phases,
  • secure start-up,
  • recommend the right solutions (VSD, start-up strategy, motor margins).

The quality of the selection directly depends on the quality of the information shared.

Key takeaway
Most start-up issues are not caused by a “bad fan”,
but by a selection based on an incomplete operating scenario.

In this Pitfalls in Selecting Fans series, we will continue sharing these real-life lessons from the field.