Line Filters and Coalescing Housings: The Unsung Heroes of Clean Compressed Air
Line filters and coalescing housings are essential for delivering clean, dry, and oil-free compressed air. Learn how they remove contaminants, support ISO 8573-1 compliance, reduce pressure drop, and protect your equipment from costly failures and downtime.
Clean, dry, and oil-free compressed air doesn’t come directly from the compressor — it’s the result of proper air treatment after compression. Among the most critical components in this process are line filters and coalescing filter housings. They quietly protect downstream equipment, ensure product quality, and prevent costly contamination and downtime.
At OCP Europe, we supply a full range of line filters and housings engineered to meet OEM standards and ISO 8573-1 air purity requirements. In this article, we’ll explain how these components work, the types of contaminants they remove, and how to maintain them correctly for maximum efficiency.
1. The Purpose of Line Filters
After air is compressed, it becomes hot, saturated with water vapor, and often carries oil aerosols and solid particles. Line filters remove these contaminants before the air reaches tools, machines, or production lines.
Their main functions are:
- Protecting pneumatic valves, cylinders, and instruments from dirt and corrosion.
- Improving product quality in sensitive industries like food, pharmaceuticals, and painting.
- Extending the life of dryers and downstream filters.
2. How Coalescing Filters Work
Coalescing filters are designed to remove fine oil mist and sub-micron particles that regular filters can’t stop. Inside the element, fibers capture tiny droplets of oil and water, merging them (“coalescing”) into larger drops that drain away.
This process delivers extremely clean air — often below 0.01 mg/m³ oil content, meeting ISO 8573-1 Class 1 requirements.
3. The Role of Filter Housings
A coalescing filter is only as good as its housing. The housing must handle system pressure (often up to 16 bar), resist corrosion, and ensure laminar airflow through the element.
High-quality housings, like those supplied by OCP Europe, are built from aluminum or stainless steel, with precision-machined threads and internal surface treatments that prevent oxidation and minimize pressure drop.
4. Types of Line Filters
A complete air filtration system typically uses multiple stages:
- Particulate Filter (Pre-filter): Removes rust, dust, and solid particles.
- Coalescing Filter: Captures oil aerosols and fine particulates.
- Activated Carbon Filter: Removes oil vapor and odor for ultra-clean air.
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Dust Filter (Post-filter): Installed after dryers to ensure final air purity.
Each stage contributes to the final ISO 8573-1 air quality class.
5. Symptoms of Filter or Housing Problems
Knowing when to replace a filter or service a housing is critical. Warning signs include:
- Rising differential pressure (ΔP) across the element.
- Oil or water traces downstream.
- Corrosion or leakage around housing threads.
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Crushed or deformed filter elements.
Operating with clogged filters increases energy costs by up to 10% due to higher pressure loss.
6. Recommended Maintenance Practices
- Replace elements at the manufacturer’s suggested interval (typically every 4,000–8,000 hours).
- Inspect housings for corrosion and thread wear at each service.
- Always depressurize the system before removal.
- Use only compatible OCP replacement elements to ensure correct filtration efficiency and pressure drop.
7. Why Choose OCP Europe for Line Filters and Housings
OCP Europe provides a complete aftermarket solution for air treatment components, including:
- Coalescing and particulate filter elements compatible with major OEMs (Atlas Copco, Kaeser, Ingersoll Rand, Boge, etc.).
- Durable housings built for industrial environments and easy maintenance.
- Technical support to identify correct filter grades for each ISO 8573-1 class.
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Stock in Europe for fast delivery and reduced downtime.
Every product is engineered for reliability, efficiency, and clean air performance that meets or exceeds OEM standards.
Conclusion
Line filters and coalescing housings are the silent protectors of your compressed air system. Neglecting them leads to contamination, energy waste, and production risks.
By maintaining them with high-quality OCP filters and housings, you guarantee clean air, stable operation, and lower total cost of ownership.
Visit the OCP Europe Knowledge Portal to explore our range of filters, housings, and separators — and learn how to keep your air system performing at its best.