Neil:
Dave Simpson has answered your question correctly, as usual. There would have to be a strange and lucky coincidence if the compression ratios in a 2-stage reciprocating compressor were identical. I would bet that this has never happened – within a margin of 10% between them.
But you are also correct in thinking that there is a goal to achieve the same compression ratio and amount of work between them. This means that there is a definite interest in obtaining the same compression ratio in both cylinders – or in all cylinders, if that is the case. Here, bear in mind that most people would visualize only one cylinder per stage; this may not be so. There have been cases where we have used two cylinders for one stage. The reason Dave is correct goes back to the case of reality as compared with theoretical, “virtual compression” as found in your thermodynamics text book. All reciprocating manufacturers, to my knowledge, don’t necessarily have cast iron cylinders on their shelves. But they have a very well-guarded and secured wooden form cache of potential cylinders to be cast on demand or purchase order. All cast cylinders have a corresponding wooden form made and shaped by skilled craftsmen. Most of the people who made some of the more classic and successful wooden forms are no longer alive – and it has become almost impossible to find and hire some of these “old-timers”. I have personally toured the storage rooms for these wooden forms at Ingersoll-Rand and Norwalk when these companies were successfully operating in the 1960-1970’s. It was a sight to see. This is valuable Hi-tech as important as it can get. It takes a lot of skill and know-how to carve, shape, and assemble one of these forms and they represent a lot of technology investment for the manufacturer.
Manufacturers will almost always select the most applicable cylinder forms in their collection in order to cast the “correct cylinders” for your 2- stager. You can imagine the odds that you would have to beat to come up with identical compression ratios. But the equal compression ratio still is a goal – albeit un-achievable. The reason is not so much to produce equal amount of work between them and to generate identical discharge temperatures as it is to achieve as balanced a machine as possible in order to reduce wear and tear. This is particularly important in balanced-opposed models.
So, your technician is also correct although he didn’t give you the reason as to why it is so. I have operated up to 5-stage reciprocating compressors and my records reveal that only one machine – a Clark Bros. model – ever came within the 10% margin. It was a 2-stager, balanced-opposed and ran like a Swiss watch.
Art Montemayor
Spring, TX