chemtechnical:
Most all of the bulk CO2 that I've ever compressed has been slated for the food industry - either as liquid CO2 or Dry Ice. As I said, the major challenge is getting the oil out of the CO2 gaseous product - that's not part of the screw machine's know-how, but is the property of the engineering company who puts the compressor package together. I've witnessed and visited other screw machine applications and they seemed to be operating well - except that you don't know all the dirty little secrets in the background unless you're the operator: how good does their oil removal system work? No one in the industry likes to talk about contaminated food grade CO2 - it's too serious a subject to even joke about.
Today, major purchase contracts (like Coca-Cola's) like to impose a sophisticated CO2 purity analysis on each shipment. I wouldn't mind that because I know I can produce food grade quality consistantly - albeit with added costs for downstream activated carbon adsorption prior to liquefaction. These costs, I would pass on to customers like Coca-Cola who insist on belt-and-suspenders type of guarantees. It's a different market now than what it was 40 years ago, but the basic business rules still apply.
I compressed to 220 psig and went on to mechanical oil separation, some oil adsorption, adsorptive drying, and liquefaction with an NH3 refrigeration cycle. I always used a flooded NH3 evaporator in the form of a BKU reboiler. If push came to shove in guaranteeing a max. oil content in fractions of a ppm, then I would simply put a guard bed on my activated alumina dryers and demand on-line stream analysis on an hourly basis.
You mention that Mycom is expensive; I wouldn't doubt it from your perspective. But bear in mind that you're going to rely heavily on compressor reliability and mechanical integrity for 24-hr/day, 7-day/wk performance all year. I would not rely on pricing to decide on the compressor make. I would rely on experience, history, and mechanical integrity as more important for the kind of product you are thinking of producing.
Hopes this helps.
Art Montemayor
Spring, TX