In the traditional model, customers purchase spare parts (such as discharge electrodes, collecting electrodes, insulators, rapping hammers, rapping bearings, etc.) and then need to arrange or coordinate with multiple parties for replacement, debugging, and acceptance. The entire process is cumbersome, and responsibilities are fragmented.
The "turnkey project," however, means that the service provider acts as the single point of responsibility, managing all stages from project initiation to flawless delivery. You only need to specify the end goal—"restore my electrostatic precipitator to optimal performance and stable operation." The remaining tasks, including planning, spare parts supply, on-site construction, installation and commissioning, performance verification, and personnel training, are all "bundled" and handled by the service provider. Ultimately, they hand over the "keys" to a revitalized piece of equipment that operates stably and efficiently.
