NETZSCH Progressing Cavity Pumps Keep Pennsylvania Company Brewing Quality Beers
More recently the Company has opened a second, state-of-the-art brewery in Parkesburg, Pennsylvania. The 19,700 square meter building features a German-built brewhouse with a production of about 10 brews a day for an annual output of approximately 225,000 barrels.
A Progressing Cavity Pump Solution for Spent Grain Transfer
For a brewery with such high demand for its premium beers, the company needs pumping equipment of the highest reliability, maintainability and service life. Brewers of all sizes rely on NETZSCH NEMO® progressing cavity pumps to keep production moving.
NETZSCH progressing cavity pumps can be used in many stages in the beer brewing process. However due to the pumps’ facility in conveying nonflowing, viscous, and abrasive media, the most popular application for the progressing cavity pumps is for spent grain removal.
The Vice President of Brewery Operations noted, “After all of the extract has been taken out for brewing beer, the remaining material – the spent grain, including spent hops – is a very high-moisture product. We used this type of NETZSCH pump for the same application in our Downingtown facility. We have experience with these pumps – they just run – so it made sense to install the same pump technology in our new Parkesburg brewhouse. To this point, we have done no maintenance on the NETZSCH pump in the Parkesburg brewhouse. We just let it run. The same NETZSCH pump that conveys spent grain in our Downingtown facili- ty ran for four or five years before the stator needed replacing.”
Bavarian Brewing Education and Bavarian Pump Technology Come Together in a Pennsylvania Brewhouse
The owners of the brewery both studied at an famous Academy for brewing in Bavaria, Germany, known worldwide for training leading brewmasters. In an interesting geographical twist, the Academy is near NETZSCH headquarters in Bavaria. So, the founders of the Company have combined their Bavarian education with Bavarianengineered pumps made in Pennsylvania for a fastgrowing Pennsylvania brewery.
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