Sullair, L.L.C.
Company typeLimited Liability Company
IndustryIndustrial Equipment Manufacturing
Founded1965
FounderDonald C. Hoodes
Headquarters
Key people
Charlie Takeuchi, President & CEO
ProductsCommercial and industrial air compressors. Portable Air Power for construction & mining, and Stationary Air Power systems for facilities.
OwnerHitachi
Number of employees
890[1]
WebsiteSullair Global Home

Sullair is a major American manufacturer of portable and stationary rotary screw air compressors designed for commercial and industrial use. Founded in 1965 in the town of Michigan City, Indiana U.S.A., Sullair has manufacturing facilities in Michigan City that distribute and service air compressor packages and systems worldwide. Sullair also has manufacturing facilities in Suzhou, Jiangsu and Shenzhen, Guangdong China that service the Asian and Australasian markets. Sullair also has offices in Dandenong South, Australia near Melbourne, and in Sunderland, United Kingdom that services markets in the EMEA (Europe, Middle East, Africa) and Russia.

In April 2017, Hitachi acquired Sullair for US$1,245 billion.[2]

Rotary screw technology

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Although the first commercial application of a fluid injected rotary-screw compressor was accomplished by Swedish industrial manufacturer Atlas Copco in 1957, it was Sullair's founding president, Don Hoodes, that introduced the technology to the U.S. domestic market in 1966. And by 1969, Sullair had developed an entire line of portable and stationary asymmetric rotary screw air compressors.[3] Hoodes purchased the use of the technology from Swedish firm Svenska Rotor Maskiner, whose retired chief engineer, Alf Lysholm, invented the twin-screw compressor in 1934 while developing gas turbines. The Lysholm design is also used in vehicles to force air induction into engine cylinders, supercharging both gas and diesel powered engines to boost engine performance.[4] Today, rotary screw compressors are the most popular type of air compressor in operation worldwide. Sullair's leadership decision to stay exclusively with the rotary screw technology when others still relied on piston driven technology, proved to be a valuable decision for the company, and was significant in its growth within the industry.

Products

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Today, Sullair has three primary product families -

History

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References

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  1. ^ "Sullair, LLC's Competitors, Revenue, Number of Employees, Funding, Acquisitions & News - Owler Company Profile".
  2. ^ Hitachi to Acquire U.S. Industrial Machinery Maker Sullair
  3. ^ [Royce N. Brown. "Compressors: Selection & Sizing"], p.p. 127-128. Elsevier Inc, Oxford. ISBN 0-7506-7545-4.
  4. ^ Sandhyarani, Ningthoujam. "The History of Screw Compressors" Archived 2014-06-20 at the Wayback Machine, www.whipplesuperchargers.com, Retrieved on 1 May 2014.
  5. ^ "Sullair parts catalog". AGA Parts. Retrieved 2022-03-28.
  6. ^ Roger A. Stafford. "Sullair Major Force in Compressor Marketplace", Milwaukee Sentinel, 5 September 1977.
  7. ^ "Under Pressure", Geodrilling International, 21 December 2010. Retrieved on 6 May 2014.
  8. ^ "Industrial Products Manufacturer is Poised for Growth Under New Ownership", Press Release, 24 July 2012. Retrieved on 6 May 2014.
  9. ^ Pollok, Murray (28 April 2017). "Hitachi to buy Sullair for US$1.24 billion". KHL. Retrieved 2020-04-13.