
Mining Utilities
Mine power systems must handle dust, heat, vibration, and planned shutdown pressure. We focus on maintainable packages, clear spares, and documentation that can travel with the project team.
Parker Hannifin content is organized around the conditions that make power generation equipment difficult: dust, distance, duty swings, fuel quality, compliance pressure, and limited service windows.
These industries often share the same basic equipment families, but the specification logic is never identical. A generator on a mine bench, a nitrogen skid on an oilfield pad, and a transformer package inside an industrial plant all require different attention to cooling, access, instrumentation, and records. This page translates those differences into practical review themes.

Mine power systems must handle dust, heat, vibration, and planned shutdown pressure. We focus on maintainable packages, clear spares, and documentation that can travel with the project team.

Fuel gas conditioning, nitrogen support, and hazardous area considerations require disciplined review of ventilation, purge logic, instrumentation, and inspection evidence.

Plants need dependable auxiliary power and utility systems that can be maintained by operations teams without unclear manuals, undocumented substitutions, or vague alarm response plans.
Tell us which industry conditions are most severe. We will help organize the specification conversation around those constraints.
For the most useful first response, include whether the site is new-build or retrofit, whether the equipment will run continuously or in standby, and which environmental limits have caused issues on past projects.
Discuss Site Conditions