OK, do you really think that a 2-stage 2803 will go from 9 psia to 262 psia (29 ratios, probably 8 ratios in the first stage and 4 ratios in the second)? With 80F inlet and k=1.28, first stage discharge would be 391F, I think something should trip. My point is that cylinders and clearance are sized for a given set of conditions, change the conditions and the change is not evenly applied to both cylinders (like Cooper's program says it will be) and you end up with serious imbalances.
When I was trying to make a technology decision in 1997 for a group of very high volume CBM wells I visited over 200 field compressors in the San Juan Basin operated by 4 different production companies. I gathered pressures, temperatures, and flow rates across all of the skids. This study included integrals and separables. Not a single one was anywhere close to the values predicted by the vendor programs. I saw 3 stage compressors where the first stage discharge was higher than line pressure. I saw blowthrough in one stage or the other in a bunch of machines. I saw a lot of high temp kills disabled. What I didn't see was any evidence that either Engineering or high quality operations had ever paid any attention to the machines. Wellhead recip compressors require all of the attention that compressors inside the plant fence get, but no one has the staff to do it to a 1,000 unit fleet spread across a county. It just doesn't happen. Conditions change many times per day, but the compressors get re-evaluated once or twice a decade. Not a good fit. I elected to go with the largely-untried (at least in wellhead use) flooded screws. There were many times over the next couple of years that I questioned that decision as we climbed the learning curve, but in retrospect I couldn't have made a better decision (but I REALLY wish I had known then what I know now about packaging pitfalls).
David