CLEVELAND TANK & SUPPLY BOOSTS AIR QUALITY

Niche Manufacturer Boosts Air Quality with Fume Extraction Measures

“The remediation has been phenomenal,” Ferris notes, adding that all three installed fume extraction solutions have produced significant increases in air quality throughout the manufacturing facility.

 

As one of the nation’s leading manufacturers and suppliers of OEM and aftermarket diesel fuel tanks, Cleveland Tank & Supply operates a busy shop floor to keep up with customer demands and its "immediate shipment" promise.

The company, which occupies a 33,000-square-foot facility less than five miles east of downtown Cleveland, first made its mark as a buyer and seller of tanks and evolved into niche manufacturing for companies requiring 1,000 tanks a year or less about 10 years ago. Even while employing less than 50 total workers and running only two shifts, this company has become a powerhouse in the diesel fuel tank market.

In any given week, Cleveland Tank produces tanks to fit various makes of vehicles, oil fields, specialty equipment and trailers, as well as ones designed for specific custom applications and made of steel, aluminum or stainless steel. Industries served include oil field, medical and fire/rescue, safety, mining, hydraulic fracturing, recycling and refuse, construction, forestry and school transportation, to name only a few. The largest tanks manufactured are 200 gallons for side-mount applications and 300 gallons for non-side mount.

Besides its long-established goal to provide immediate shipment of in-stock tanks to its customers, the company also prides itself on the fact that all of its tanks – in-stock and custom orders– are truly "Made in the USA," fabricated in the heartland out of the U.S.-produced materials.

"All of our products are made only from domestic aluminum, steel and stainless steel,” notes Rich Ferris, the company's vice president and general manager." All of our tanks are stamped with 'Made in the USA,' and we mean it."

The manufacturing process for standard, in-stock products, as well as tanks custom designed to customer specifications, involves plasma cutting and welding on every tank. Cleveland Tank's shop floor – which encompasses nearly 17,500 feet of space – features a high-definition plasma cutting station, approximately 10 MIG and TIG welding booths for steel and aluminum products (roughly 250 to 300 tanks per week) and a stainless steel welding booth. The company also is in the process of installing a robotic MIG welding system.

 This heavy, constant production boils down to one thing – a lot of welding. And with all that welding, comes the potential for weld fume in the various production areas.

“Everything we build gets welded,” notes David Wilson, Cleveland Tank & Supply’s operations manager. “Depending on the application and material used, we can easily weld 10 tanks per day per booth. We obviously generate fume all day long.”

The company took a three-fold approach to reducing haze and improving overall air quality on the shop floor. First, it installed a free-standing fume extraction system that reduces the overall concentration of welding fume on the floor. Both Ferris and Wilson said the company initially looked at fume extraction systems that have arms extending to individual welding booths but decided the facility would be best served with a system that provided comprehensive protection for the entire shop floor. They started investigating options by talking with about 10 different vendors.

When they heard about The Circulator™ from Lincoln Electric, they were intrigued, Ferris says. This standalone system uses continuous filtration and airflow to extract and filter welding fume released during the most common welding fabrication processes. It supplements natural, draft ventilation or forced ventilation through the roof and wall fans, if necessary. For Wilson and Ferris, this system made the most sense for Cleveland Tank’s needs.

"There used to be a haze overhead throughout the whole facility, and to mitigate that, we would have to run exhaust fans all year, even in the winter. This made it pretty cold in the work areas," Wilson says. "Now, using the Circulator™, we rarely, if ever, need to turn on those fans."

Next, they focused on the high-definition plasma table. Plasma cutting is an application that inherently generates dust, fumes and potentially hazardous sparks. At this particular table, workers run between 200 and 300 aluminum and stainless steel sheets per day, ranging in size from 36”x96” to 72”x120”.

 

Cleveland Tank wanted to eradicate the fume and particulate matter in this work zone, in light of the high production and the materials used. It also sought a fume extraction solution that could stop sparks created during the cutting process from entering the extraction system’s filter.

“We wanted to be assured that the system would suck up everything that burns on the table and pose no filter fire risk,” Ferris said.

The answer? Spark Guardian™, part of Lincoln Electric’s GUARDIAN™ fire safety solution for fume control systems. This system, working in tandem with The Circulator™, now efficiently prevents sparks from passing through, and on to, the extraction filter’s system. It also serves as an in-line, pre-separator that reduces dust load in the connected system.

“It has exceeded our expectations,” Ferris says. “Because we can use it with our comprehensive fume extraction system, we have been able to cut stainless steel on the table. That’s something that would be unheard of if we hadn’t put these fume extraction measures into place.”

As Cleveland Tank officials were formulating their air quality improvement measures, they also knew from the start of this process that they also wanted to install extraction measures in the shop’s stainless steel welding booth. Welders in this booth fabricate up to five stainless steel tanks per week, as well as stainless steel straps and brackets.

“While developing our specification plan for this particular area, we discovered that our levels of hexavalent chromium were 1.5 times over the allowed limit,” Ferris said. “This discovery gave us even greater incentive to select the best system and get it up and running.”

 The company ultimately specified Lincoln Electric’s Downflex® Downdraft table, a dual-purpose workbench and extraction unit designed specifically to remove weld fume at the source – a must for the regulations governing stainless steel welding. The addition of this unit made notable improvements to the booth’s air quality.

“The air is so much cleaner in the booth,” says welder Mike McAvoy. “It’s definitely noticeable.”

And furthermore, the hexavalent chromium levels are now 100 times lower than the limit after installing the downdraft table in the stainless steel booth.

“The remediation has been phenomenal,” Ferris notes, adding that all three installed fume extraction solutions have produced significant increases in air quality throughout the manufacturing facility. “The functionality and versatility of these three units working together is terrific.”