Answer first
What does Spirax Sarco bring to OEM projects?
OEM projects often need support well beyond component selection. Spirax Sarco helps equipment builders align steam-system design, regulatory needs, documentation, product configuration and lifecycle support with the machine and the end-user market.
OEM equipment has to do more than work on a schematic. The steam-side design needs to fit the machine envelope, the control concept, the target industry, the regulatory environment and the service conditions the end user will actually face.
Spirax Sarco supports OEMs that need practical engineering input during design, specification, supply and follow-on service. The source material highlights application support, configurable product choices, certification-aware delivery and technical resources that help machine builders take equipment from concept into repeatable field performance.
What OEM support usually needs to cover
Duty-led specification
OEM steam solutions should be selected around the machine duty, target market and customer outcome, not around a familiar component list.
Certification and market fit
The source material emphasizes support for local and global requirements, with standards and management-system references such as CRN, IBR, GOST, ASME, ASME BPE and ATEX / IECEx.
Support beyond hardware
The source material highlights lifecycle support, technical documents, steam tools and access to more than 2,500 3D CAD models in formats such as DWG, SAT and STEP.
Common OEM next steps
Shortlist OEM-relevant product families
Use the product routes when the machine design is already narrowing toward specific control, clean steam, heat transfer or steam trap hardware.
Explore productsAssess the wider engineering partner
Review Spirax Sarco background when supplier capability, international support or engineering focus matters to the OEM selection process.
Read the about pageSupport specification and handover
Look at training when machine builders or end users need stronger steam knowledge alongside equipment delivery.
See training optionsContinue your Spirax Sarco OEM research
OEM research often moves from supplier capability into detailed steam-duty support and product-family selection.
Why Spirax Sarco for OEMs
Start with the Spirax Sarco overview when you need confidence in the wider engineering partner, manufacturing footprint and steam-specialist focus behind the OEM offer.
Connect OEM needs to products
Move into product families when the equipment design is becoming more specific around control, clean steam, heat transfer or condensate handling hardware.
Connect OEM needs to services
Use services and training when specification support, knowledge transfer or wider system understanding matters alongside the hardware choice.
Related products
Control systems
Control solutions for pressure, temperature and wider system duties, from straightforward self-acting arrangements through to more configurable valve packages that can be integrated into OEM equipment designs.
Condensate recovery support
Condensate recovery hardware for machines and packages where drainage, stall prevention or condensate return are part of the design challenge and need to fit the wider equipment layout.
Heat transfer and clean steam solutions
Heat-transfer and clean steam generation routes for OEM packages that need hot-water performance or higher-integrity steam supply in sectors such as food, pharmaceutical or sterilisation-related equipment.
OEM steam-solution FAQ
OEM enquiries tend to move quickly from concept support into component-level detail, especially when the equipment will be exported or adapted for multiple industries.
What steam topics matter most to OEMs?
OEMs often need support across pressure control, heat transfer, condensate handling, hygienic design, materials, certification requirements and how those choices affect installation, commissioning and long-term service.
Why is point-to-point design support important for OEMs?
Because a steam component that works in principle may still be the wrong choice once machine layout, utility limits, control philosophy, maintenance access, local regulations and end-user expectations are considered together.
Do OEMs ever need hygienic steam components?
Yes. If the machine serves hygienic or higher-purity processes, the design may need clean-service valves, sanitary traps or other higher-integrity components instead of standard industrial hardware. The source material also points to application areas such as SIP/CIP modules, WFI machines, bioreactors, autoclaves and sterilisers.
What kind of support matters after the initial OEM design phase?
The source material describes support from design through supply, commissioning and aftermarket service, plus access to technical resources such as CAD files, steam tools and product documentation. That matters when an OEM is building equipment for multiple markets or repeated installations.