Jajaran mesin IBM Ever-Power Korea<\/a> from ZQ40 through ZQ60HE is available with energy consumption documentation for Korean customer investment analysis.<\/p>\n <\/p>\nKorea Ever-Power ZQ IBM production line \u2014 the energy consumption of the IBM production system comprises IBM machine energy (dominant component at 65-75% of total), mould cooling chiller energy (15-20%), material drying hopper energy (5-8%) and conveyor\/auxiliary energy (3-5%). This guide focuses on IBM machine energy consumption (the controllable component determined by machine type \u2014 hydraulic versus all-electric ZQ60HE) and provides total IBM production system energy estimates where auxiliary consumption data is available from Korea Ever-Power\u2019s Ansan-si production monitoring system.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<\/section>\n\n\n
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BAGIAN 02<\/p>\n
Hydraulic IBM Energy Profile: Why Hydraulic Pump Consumes More<\/h2>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n
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Continuous Pump Operation<\/p>\n
Hydraulic IBM machines (ZQ40, ZQ60, ZQ80, ZQ110, ZQ135) use a fixed-displacement or variable-displacement hydraulic pump driven continuously by an electric motor running at rated speed throughout the production shift. The hydraulic pump motor runs at full rated power during both the active machine cycle phases (injection, clamping, blow) AND the cooling dwell time \u2014 even though the cooling dwell (55-70% of total IBM cycle time) requires no hydraulic actuation. During cooling dwell, the hydraulic pump motor unloads against the hydraulic accumulator but continues drawing 30-50% of full load power (the no-load pump power consumption from hydraulic fluid circulation losses and pump mechanical friction). This continuous no-load power consumption during the cooling dwell portion of the IBM cycle is the primary reason hydraulic IBM machines consume 30-35% more energy than all-electric servo IBM machines at equivalent production conditions.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n
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Hydraulic System Heat Generation<\/p>\n
Hydraulic IBM machine systems generate significant heat through hydraulic fluid viscous friction, pump inefficiency and hydraulic valve pressure drops. ZQ60 hydraulic system generates approximately 3-5 kW of waste heat into the hydraulic oil reservoir during continuous production operation \u2014 requiring active hydraulic oil cooling (separate oil cooler or water cooling circuit for the hydraulic oil tank) that adds 0.5-1.5 kW additional cooling energy to the ZQ60 hydraulic system energy consumption. This hydraulic heat generation raises factory ambient temperature around the IBM machine, increasing the IBM production environment cooling load on the Korean factory HVAC system \u2014 an indirect energy cost that is typically not included in IBM machine energy consumption comparisons but represents an additional hidden energy disadvantage of hydraulic IBM versus all-electric ZQ60HE.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/section>\n\n\n
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BAGIAN 03<\/p>\n
ZQ60HE All-Electric Energy Profile: On-Demand Servo Power<\/h2>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\nZQ60HE all-electric IBM internal servo motor drive architecture \u2014 each servo motor (injection 22 kW, screw feed 18 kW, clamping 15+15 kW, rotary 2.9 kW) draws power only during its specific actuation phase of the IBM cycle. During PP IBM cooling dwell (the longest IBM cycle phase at 55-70% of total cycle), all servo motors are stationary and drawing near-zero power (servo drive standby current <0.5 A per drive). This on-demand energy profile is the fundamental mechanism of ZQ60HE\u2019s 30-35% energy advantage over hydraulic IBM machines at equivalent production conditions.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n
ZQ60HE POWER CONSUMPTION BY IBM CYCLE PHASE (100ml PP IBM REFERENCE)<\/p>\n
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Injection Phase (0.8s)<\/p>\n
~35-45 kW peak<\/p>\n
Injection servo at full rated power during 0.8s PP injection fill stroke. Peak power 35-45 kW from injection servo (22 kW) + screw feed (18 kW) + rotary table hold (2.9 kW). Duration 20% of total cycle<\/p>\n<\/div>\n
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Clamping + Blow (0.7s)<\/p>\n
~25-35 kW<\/p>\n
Clamping servos (15+15 kW) during mould close + blow pressure hold. Injection servo retracted (near-zero draw). Duration 17% of total cycle<\/p>\n<\/div>\n
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Cooling Dwell (2.5s)<\/p>\n
~3-5 kW<\/p>\n
Near-zero servo motor draw during PP cooling dwell \u2014 only barrel heater energy (2-3 kW) and servo standby current (<0.5 A per drive). Duration 63% of total cycle = primary energy saving versus hydraulic IBM<\/p>\n<\/div>\n
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Rotary + Strip (0.4s)<\/p>\n
~8-12 kW<\/p>\n
Rotary table servo (2.9 kW) + stripping servo (clamping servo reverse motion) during table rotation and bottle stripping. Duration ~10% of total cycle<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/section>\n\n\n
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BAGIAN 04<\/p>\n
Energy Consumption Data: ZQ Series Hydraulic vs ZQ60HE<\/h2>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n
\n\n\nMESIN<\/th>\n TYPE<\/th>\n INSTALLED (kW)<\/th>\n OPERATING (kWh\/hr)<\/th>\n DAILY (16hr, kWh)<\/th>\n<\/tr>\n<\/thead>\n \n\nZQ40<\/td>\n Hidrolik<\/td>\n 22<\/td>\n 8\u201312<\/td>\n 128\u2013192<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n \nZQ60<\/td>\n Hidrolik<\/td>\n 30<\/td>\n 18\u201322<\/td>\n 288\u2013352<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n \nZQ60HE \u2605<\/td>\n All-Electric<\/td>\n 90 (installed) \n15-25 operating<\/span><\/td>\n 12\u201315<\/td>\n 192\u2013240<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n \nZQ80<\/td>\n Hidrolik<\/td>\n 45<\/td>\n 25\u201332<\/td>\n 400\u2013512<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n \nZQ110<\/td>\n Hidrolik<\/td>\n 60<\/td>\n 35\u201345<\/td>\n 560\u2013720<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n \nZQ135<\/td>\n Hidrolik<\/td>\n 75<\/td>\n 40\u201355<\/td>\n 640\u2013880<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/tbody>\n<\/table>\n<\/div>\n\n
Note on installed vs operating power:<\/strong> ZQ60HE installed capacity is 90 kW (sum of all servo motor rated powers) but operating power at PP IBM production is only 12-15 kWh\/hr because servo motors operate in short high-power actuation bursts (0.5-0.8s) with near-zero draw during the 2-3s cooling dwell between bursts. Korean customers should use operating power (12-15 kWh\/hr) for energy cost calculation, not installed capacity.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/section>\nPP IBM container output from Korea Ever-Power ZQ60HE all-electric IBM production \u2014 at approximately 53% lower energy per container produced versus ZQ60 hydraulic (combining 30-35% lower hourly energy consumption and 20-25% higher container output per hour from ZQ60HE\u2019s 2.5s dry cycle), the ZQ60HE produces these PP IBM cosmetic and pharmaceutical containers at the lowest energy cost per container in the Korea Ever-Power ZQ machine range. Korean cosmetic and pharmaceutical brand customers using ZQ60HE IBM containers can substantiate per-container energy reduction claims in ESG reporting and Korean Fair Trade Commission-compliant green packaging communication.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n
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BAGIAN 05<\/p>\n
10-Year Energy Cost Saving Analysis: Korean and Global Markets<\/h2>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n
ZQ60HE vs ZQ60 HYDRAULIC \u2014 10-YEAR ENERGY SAVING (BASIS: 16 HR\/DAY, 300 DAYS\/YEAR)<\/p>\n
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Annual Saving (kWh)<\/p>\n
86,400\u2013115,200<\/p>\n
Energy saving: (18-22 kWh\/hr ZQ60) minus (12-15 kWh\/hr ZQ60HE) = 6-10 kWh\/hr saving \u00d7 16 hr\/day \u00d7 300 days = 28,800-48,000 kWh\/year. Range reflects ZQ60 hydraulic load variation at different PP IBM formats<\/p>\n<\/div>\n
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Annual Saving (Korea KRW)<\/p>\n
KRW 3.5\u20135.8M<\/p>\n
Korean industrial electricity at KRW 120\/kWh (2026 rate): 28,800-48,000 kWh\/year \u00d7 KRW 120 = KRW 3.46-5.76M annual energy saving per ZQ60HE versus ZQ60 hydraulic at same production programme<\/p>\n<\/div>\n
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10-Year Saving (Korea)<\/p>\n
KRW 35\u201358M<\/p>\n
10-year cumulative energy saving at Korean electricity tariff (before tariff escalation adjustment) \u2014 representing 50-80% of ZQ60HE capital premium over ZQ60 hydraulic recovered through energy saving alone<\/p>\n<\/div>\n
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Annual Saving (India INR)<\/p>\n
INR 245,000\u2013410,000<\/p>\n
Indian industrial electricity at INR 8.5\/kWh average: 28,800-48,000 kWh\/year \u00d7 INR 8.5 = INR 245,000-408,000 annual ZQ60HE energy saving for Indian IBM customers<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/section>\n\n\n
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BAGIAN 06<\/p>\n
Carbon Footprint Reduction: IBM Sustainability Positioning<\/h2>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n
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Annual CO\u2082 Reduction from ZQ60HE<\/p>\n
ZQ60HE energy saving of 28,800-48,000 kWh\/year versus ZQ60 hydraulic translates to annual CO\u2082 emission reduction at the Korean electricity grid emission factor of 0.4578 kgCO\u2082\/kWh (Korea Electric Power Corporation 2024 grid emission factor): 28,800-48,000 kWh\/year \u00d7 0.4578 kg CO\u2082\/kWh = 13.2-22.0 tonne CO\u2082 annual reduction per ZQ60HE versus ZQ60 hydraulic. Over 10 years: 132-220 tonnes CO\u2082 cumulative reduction per ZQ60HE IBM machine \u2014 equivalent to approximately 55-90 passenger car-years of CO\u2082 emission. For Korean IBM container manufacturers participating in Korean K-ETS (Korean Emissions Trading Scheme) carbon credit market, ZQ60HE energy saving generates measurable GHG emission reduction that can be credited against Korean manufacturing carbon allocation or sold as carbon credits at Korean K-ETS market price.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n
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IBM Container Sustainability Claims for Korean Brands<\/p>\n
Korean cosmetic and FMCG brands increasingly communicate packaging sustainability in product marketing (ESG reporting, Naver Smart Store sustainability badge, Korean cosmetic brand INCI-certified green claim). ZQ60HE all-electric IBM production provides a quantifiable energy reduction claim compared to hydraulic IBM production that Korean brand customers can use in product sustainability communication: IBM containers produced on ZQ60HE all-electric IBM consume approximately 30% less manufacturing energy per container than equivalent containers produced on hydraulic IBM machines \u2014 a verifiable production process sustainability claim supported by Korea Ever-Power\u2019s ZQ60HE vs ZQ60 hydraulic energy measurement data. Korea Ever-Power provides Korean brand customers with ZQ60HE production energy certificate (energy consumption per 1,000 containers produced) for Korean brand customer ESG reporting and product green claim substantiation under Korean Fair Trade Commission green marketing guidelines.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\nKorea Ever-Power IBM total production system energy components \u2014 the auxiliary equipment package (chiller, dryer, conveyor) adds 5-12 kWh\/hr to the IBM machine operating energy, making the total system energy consumption: ZQ60HE system approximately 18-25 kWh\/hr (machine 12-15 kWh + auxiliary 6-10 kWh) versus ZQ60 hydraulic system approximately 26-34 kWh\/hr (machine 18-22 kWh + auxiliary 8-12 kWh). Korea Ever-Power\u2019s total system energy data is available for Korean customer electricity cost budgeting and factory power supply planning at ZQ machine order stage.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<\/section>\n\n\n
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FAQ TEKNIK<\/p>\n
IBM Energy Consumption \u2014 Engineering Questions<\/h2>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n
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Q01<\/span><\/p>\nDoes ZQ60HE energy saving scale with production speed? If ZQ60HE produces 25% more containers\/hour, is the per-container energy actually the same as ZQ60 hydraulic?<\/p>\n<\/div>\n
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The energy saving and per-container energy calculation requires careful accounting of both energy consumption and output simultaneously. ZQ60HE produces approximately 20-25% more containers per hour than ZQ60 hydraulic at equivalent format (ZQ60HE 2.5s dry cycle versus ZQ60 4.0s dry cycle, translating to approximately 20% higher production cycle rate at equivalent cooling-limited total cycle). ZQ60HE energy consumption per hour is approximately 30-35% lower than ZQ60 hydraulic. The combined effect on per-container energy: ZQ60HE energy per container = 12-15 kWh\/hr \u00f7 (ZQ60HE containers\/hour) versus ZQ60 hydraulic = 18-22 kWh\/hr \u00f7 (ZQ60 containers\/hour). At 10 cavities, 100ml PP IBM: ZQ60HE at 2.5s dry cycle (estimated 5.5s total cycle with cooling) produces approximately 6,545 containers\/hour at 12 kWh\/hr = 1.83 Wh\/container. ZQ60 hydraulic at 4.0s dry cycle (estimated 7.0s total cycle) produces approximately 5,142 containers\/hour at 20 kWh\/hr = 3.89 Wh\/container. Per-container energy comparison: ZQ60HE at 1.83 Wh\/container versus ZQ60 hydraulic at 3.89 Wh\/container \u2014 ZQ60HE uses approximately 53% less energy per IBM container produced, combining the energy consumption reduction and the output rate increase effects. This per-container energy advantage is larger than the hourly energy saving percentage because ZQ60HE produces more containers per kWh than ZQ60 hydraulic, making ZQ60HE the clearly superior choice on both absolute energy cost per hour and energy intensity per container produced.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n
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Pertanyaan 02<\/span><\/p>\nWhat is the power demand profile of ZQ60HE for Korean factory electrical infrastructure planning?<\/p>\n<\/div>\n
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ZQ60HE power demand profile for Korean factory electrical infrastructure planning differs from ZQ60 hydraulic in one critical way: ZQ60HE generates short-duration peak power demands (35-45 kW peak during 0.8s injection phase) at approximately 4-5 second intervals (one peak per IBM cycle), versus ZQ60 hydraulic at relatively constant 18-22 kW continuous demand. Korean factory electrical infrastructure (Korean transformer capacity, distribution switchgear rating and feeder cable sizing) must accommodate ZQ60HE peak demand rather than average demand for correct electrical design. Korea Ever-Power recommends the following ZQ60HE electrical infrastructure specifications for Korean factory planning: incoming power supply: 45 kVA three-phase transformer capacity minimum for ZQ60HE machine circuit (45 kVA \u00f7 (380V \u00d7 \u221a3) = 68A breaker, providing 35-45 kW peak demand capacity with adequate margin). Note that ZQ60HE average demand at 12-15 kWh\/hr is approximately 12-15 kVA \u2014 significantly lower than the 45 kVA transformer capacity required for peak demand. Korean power factor correction: ZQ60HE servo drives generate reactive power (power factor ~0.8-0.88 without correction) \u2014 Korea Electric Power Corporation (KEPCO) commercial and industrial tariff applies power factor penalty below 0.9 power factor. Korea Ever-Power recommends ZQ60HE customers install an automatic power factor correction (APFC) capacitor bank (5-10 kVAr rating for ZQ60HE) to maintain KEPCO power factor above 0.9 and avoid KEPCO power factor surcharge on Korean industrial electricity bill. Korea Ever-Power provides ZQ60HE electrical single-line diagram and transformer sizing recommendation at ZQ60HE machine order for Korean customer factory electrical engineering.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n
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Q03<\/span><\/p>\nHow does IBM machine energy consumption compare to polymer resin energy at the total product life cycle level?<\/p>\n<\/div>\n
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At the total product life cycle (LCA) level, IBM machine energy consumption is a relatively small component of total container environmental impact compared to polymer resin production energy. PP resin production at standard Korean steam cracker: approximately 70-80 MJ\/kg cradle-to-gate embodied energy (ECOINVENT 3.8 PP production data). A 10g PP IBM bottle therefore contains approximately 700-800 kJ (0.19-0.22 kWh) of polymer embodied energy. IBM machine energy to produce the same 10g PP bottle: at ZQ60 hydraulic 20 kWh\/hr producing 9,000 bottles\/hour = 2.22 Wh\/bottle = 0.0022 kWh\/bottle. IBM machine energy (0.0022 kWh) is approximately 1-2% of polymer embodied energy (0.19-0.22 kWh) at the bottle level. This means the PP resin production energy is approximately 50-100x larger than the IBM machine processing energy per bottle. ZQ60HE energy saving of 53% per container (from Q01 above) reduces IBM machine processing energy from approximately 0.0039 kWh\/bottle (ZQ60 hydraulic) to 0.0018 kWh\/bottle (ZQ60HE) \u2014 saving 0.0021 kWh per bottle, or approximately 1% of total bottle embodied energy. Korean cosmetic and FMCG brands seeking to reduce total product packaging carbon footprint should prioritise PP resin selection (bio-based PP from Braskem or Korean biomethanol PP reduces polymer embodied energy by 60-70%) over IBM machine energy optimisation, as the polymer choice has 50-100x larger LCA impact than the IBM machine type. However, ZQ60HE energy saving remains valuable for operational electricity cost reduction and Korean K-ETS carbon credit generation at Korean industrial electricity tariff economics.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n
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Pertanyaan 04<\/span><\/p>\nDoes ZQ60HE energy advantage remain at high-format IBM (1L bottle on ZQ60HE-equivalent all-electric large format)?<\/p>\n<\/div>\n
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Korea Ever-Power\u2019s current ZQ series all-electric IBM offering is limited to ZQ60HE at the equivalent of ZQ60 hydraulic format range (30-500ml PP IBM). Korea Ever-Power does not currently offer all-electric versions of ZQ80, ZQ110 or ZQ135 \u2014 the 500ml-1L large-format IBM segment is served by ZQ80\/ZQ110\/ZQ135 hydraulic machines only. For Korean customers running large-format IBM (500ml-1L) on ZQ80\/ZQ110\/ZQ135 hydraulic, the energy saving principle from all-electric IBM applies theoretically \u2014 an all-electric 500ml-1L IBM machine would produce comparable 30-35% energy savings versus hydraulic at large format. However, all-electric drive systems at the 800-1,350 KN clamping force required for ZQ80-ZQ135 are technically more complex (larger servo motor and ball screw actuators for high-force applications) and commercially less available in the Asian IBM machine market. Korea Ever-Power is monitoring global all-electric IBM machine development at large-format scale and will announce ZQ series all-electric expansion if commercially available technology at ZQ80-ZQ135 equivalent performance and competitive capital cost becomes available. Current Korea Ever-Power recommendation for large-format IBM customers concerned about energy cost: ZQ80\/ZQ110\/ZQ135 hydraulic with variable-displacement pump option (available on ZQ110 and ZQ135) reduces hydraulic pump energy consumption by 15-20% compared to fixed-displacement pump standard configuration, partially closing the energy gap with all-electric IBM at large format.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n
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Q05<\/span><\/p>\nWhat metering equipment does Korea Ever-Power recommend for measuring ZQ60HE energy at the Korean customer facility?<\/p>\n<\/div>\n
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Korea Ever-Power recommends three energy metering options for Korean IBM customers wishing to independently verify ZQ60HE versus ZQ60 hydraulic energy consumption at their Korean production facility. Dedicated circuit energy meter (recommended): install a class 0.5 energy meter (kWh meter with pulse output, IEC 62053-22 compliant) on the ZQ60HE dedicated supply circuit at the Korean factory distribution board \u2014 provides kWh consumption per hour, per shift and per production batch for Korean GMP batch energy record and KEPCO power factor monitoring. Korea Ever-Power recommends Carlo Gavazzi EM24 or equivalent Korean-certified revenue-grade energy meter for ZQ60HE energy monitoring at Korean pharmaceutical or cosmetic GMP facilities. HMI-integrated energy monitoring (standard ZQ60HE feature): ZQ60HE HMI includes a built-in servo drive energy monitoring display showing instantaneous power demand (kW) and cumulative energy consumption (kWh) from the servo drive inverter energy measurement \u2014 accuracy approximately \u00b15% at ZQ60HE production operating point. Korean customers can read ZQ60HE servo energy data directly from the HMI for shift-end energy reports and IBM production batch energy tracking without external metering equipment. KEPCO AMI smart meter: Korean industrial electricity customers connected to KEPCO Advanced Metering Infrastructure (AMI) system can request 15-minute interval electricity demand data from their KEPCO account online portal \u2014 providing factory-level energy demand data that can be correlated with ZQ60HE production schedules for energy benchmarking without installing additional metering equipment at the IBM machine circuit level. All three measurement methods provide sufficient energy consumption accuracy for Korean IBM machine investment ROI analysis comparing ZQ60HE all-electric with ZQ60 hydraulic at Korean customer production conditions.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n
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Q06<\/span><\/p>\nHow does Korea Ever-Power present energy saving data to Korean customers for ZQ60HE investment decision support?<\/p>\n<\/div>\n
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Korea Ever-Power provides Korean IBM customers with a ZQ60HE energy saving investment model in Microsoft Excel format at the quotation stage for Korean ZQ60HE investment decision support. The Korea Ever-Power ZQ60HE energy model inputs: Korean customer\u2019s planned daily production hours (8\/12\/16\/24), planned production days\/year (250\/300), planned IBM format (30ml\/50ml\/100ml\/200ml\/350ml PP), current or planned KEPCO electricity tariff (industrial A or B rate), ZQ60HE quoted price, and ZQ60 hydraulic equivalent quoted price (for capital cost premium calculation). Model outputs: annual energy saving (kWh\/year), annual energy cost saving (KRW\/year at customer\u2019s KEPCO tariff), ZQ60HE capital premium payback period from energy saving alone, 10-year NPV (net present value) of energy saving at 5% Korean discount rate, and CO\u2082 emission reduction at KEPCO grid emission factor for Korean ESG report. Korea Ever-Power\u2019s Korean sales team presents the ZQ60HE energy saving model at Korean customer site visit as part of the standard ZQ60HE quotation process, enabling Korean IBM machine buyers to make an informed investment comparison between ZQ60HE all-electric and ZQ60 hydraulic on a total 10-year cost of ownership basis rather than capital cost alone. Contact Korea Ever-Power in Ansan-si to receive the ZQ60HE energy saving model for your specific Korean IBM production programme specification.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/section>\n
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ZQ60HE ENERGY ENQUIRY \u00b7 KOREA EVER-POWER<\/p>\n
Evaluating ZQ60HE Energy Saving for Your IBM Programme?<\/h2>\n Korea Ever-Power provides ZQ60HE vs hydraulic ZQ60 energy saving model, 10-year cost analysis, KEPCO tariff energy saving calculation and CO\u2082 reduction certificate for Korean IBM investment decision support.<\/p>\n
Request Energy Saving Analysis \u2192<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n <\/p>\n
Editor: Cxm<\/em><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"IBM ENERGY CONSUMPTION \u00b7 HYDRAULIC vs ALL-ELECTRIC \u00b7 KOREA EVER-POWER ZQ SERIES IBM Energy Consumption: Hydraulic vs All-Electric ZQ60HE Comparison Energy cost is the second-largest variable production cost in IBM after polymer resin \u2014 and the energy consumption difference between hydraulic and all-electric IBM machines is significant enough to affect machine investment economics over 10-year […]<\/p>","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_et_pb_use_builder":"","_et_pb_old_content":"","_et_gb_content_width":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[24],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-1144","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-technical-deep-dive"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/isbm-blow-molding.com\/id\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1144","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/isbm-blow-molding.com\/id\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/isbm-blow-molding.com\/id\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/isbm-blow-molding.com\/id\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/isbm-blow-molding.com\/id\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=1144"}],"version-history":[{"count":2,"href":"https:\/\/isbm-blow-molding.com\/id\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1144\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":1146,"href":"https:\/\/isbm-blow-molding.com\/id\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1144\/revisions\/1146"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/isbm-blow-molding.com\/id\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=1144"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/isbm-blow-molding.com\/id\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=1144"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/isbm-blow-molding.com\/id\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=1144"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}