@abnfrog I remember that thread and I remember that your tech never actually said why. He may have convinced you, but you didn't relay to us why other than there was a nitrox specific block and left it at that.
There are tens of thousands of cubic feet of EAN32 being pumped through standard Bauer compressors every single day and I have yet to hear of one blowing up as long as it was done properly *i.e. O2 shutoff tied to the compressor shutoff so you don't blow straight o2 into it*
So please enlighten us here on what convinced you to stop continuous blending?
From Bauer's website
Same blocks, they just undergo an ultrasonic cleaning step. You have filter stacks and coalescers for oil removal, not concerned. It also doesn't stop oil going past the rings
Lube is all O2 compatible which can be done on any compressor at service time. That said, we are talking about sub 40% nitrox mixes that don't require O2 cleaning, so as long as you have an O2 shutoff to not dump pure O2 into the thing when it shuts off, all is well in the world.
Temp monitoring and maybe some extra cooling capacity that the other models don't have. That's nice, but you can hit it with an IR thermo if you're concerned. If you're really worried, for about $200 and a few hours of your time you can build a relay system with a raspberry pi that has however many thermocouple probes you want that can be tied to the shutoff circuit for the compressor. Bit ghetto compared to Bauer's solution, but just as effective.
edit: here's the thread for anyone curious. Really nothing good in here other than people trying to CYOA/Bauer getting TUV SUD certification on those blocks
nitrox blending