Project

FD Fan Blade Protection and Balance

Worn forced-draft fan blades rebuilt cold and coated to restore balance and the airflow the furnace needs.

The challenge

What was failing

A forced-draft fan feeding a furnace pulls particulate-laden air across its blades hour after hour, and that particulate wears the blade tips down and roughens the faces. As the metal comes off unevenly, the rotor falls out of balance and starts to vibrate, which loads the bearings and shakes the whole assembly. The worn, roughened blades also drag against the air stream and move less of it, so the fan no longer delivers the airflow the furnace needs to run. Left to keep wearing, the imbalance and the lost airflow force the fan, and the furnace behind it, out of service.

Rebuilt rotating equipment surface restored to a smooth running profile
Our approach

How AAS approaches it

We take the rotor down and strip the blades to clean metal so we can see exactly where the tips and faces have worn. We rebuild the worn tips and faces cold with a Belzona composite, putting the metal back where the particulate took it and bringing the blade geometry back toward its original shape. Then we lay an erosion-resistant coating across the blade surfaces, smooth enough to cut the drag and tough enough to take the particulate. With the geometry rebuilt evenly across the blades, the rotor comes back toward balance, and the smooth surface restores the airflow the furnace needs while giving the blades a wear face that holds up.

Assess and strip

We pull the rotor and strip the blades to clean metal to see where the tips and faces have worn and how far the rotor has gone out of balance.

Surface preparation

We blast the blade surfaces to a clean, profiled metal so the rebuild composite and the coating bond properly.

Rebuild tips and faces

We rebuild the worn tips and faces cold with a Belzona composite, working with no heat so the blades see no distortion.

Coat the wear faces

We apply an erosion-resistant coating across the blade surfaces, smooth to cut drag and tough enough to take the particulate in the air stream.

Balance and return to service

We confirm the rebuilt geometry brings the rotor back toward balance, then hand the fan back ready to feed the furnace.

What you get back

The result

Worn blade tips and faces rebuilt cold without replacing the rotor
Rebuilt geometry brought the rotor back toward balance and quieted the vibration loading the bearings
Erosion-resistant coating cut the drag and gave the blades a wear face matched to the particulate in the air stream
Airflow to the furnace restored by factory-trained and factory-certified Belzona applicators
In the field

From the job

Repair and protection work of this kind, performed by AAS crews across Louisiana.

24-hour on-call service

Have equipment that needs to stay in service?

Tell us what is failing. We respond quickly, and we offer 24-hour on-call service.

Call (225) 751-1930