Get in Touch with TCPEL
Cooling Inquiry Readiness Checklist
Check the details that help TCPEL size the cooler, fan, cyclone, dust collector, discharge, and packing connection without slow back-and-forth emails.
Quote Summary
What This Prevents
Missing temperature, moisture, or layout data often turns a model recommendation into a guess. Fill the unchecked items before asking for a formal quotation.
Inquiry Notes Buyers Often Miss
Capacity should be stated as steady output, not only peak output. Species names or feed formulas help explain material behavior. Diameter changes the bed behavior inside the cooling chamber. Inlet moisture matters as much as final moisture. Exit targets should be written against local ambient air. Powder data helps size the cyclone and filter. Layout limits can decide whether the selected body fits the plant. Discharge height affects bagging and conveying choices. One photo of the pellet mill outlet removes several layout guesses. Existing fan data is useful only when the buyer wants to reuse equipment. Spare parts should be discussed before shipment. Power supply details prevent motor mismatch. Cleaning access matters for feed lines with frequent formula changes. Storage plans influence final temperature targets. Shipment terms should sit beside the price request. A stronger inquiry pack lets the first technical answer address model, included parts, air handling, line height, local conditions, downstream connection, and quote assumptions in one reply instead of spreading those decisions across several emails. Because cooler sizing sits between the pellet mill, ducting, cyclone, dust collector, discharge device, and packing or storage system, even a small missing detail can move the discussion from a practical model match into a loose estimate that has to be corrected after drawings or photos arrive. TCPEL can quote faster when the checklist travels with the inquiry. Photos carry context that short emails miss. Drawings show height conflicts early. Samples help when a pellet breaks easily. Numbers beat adjectives in cooling discussions. Buyers save time when the first message contains plant facts.



