What exactly is a scroll compressor? Scroll compressors are high-displacement devices that operate via internal compression. Air (or other gasoline) is drawn in, trapped, reduced in quantity, and finally discharged at the whole port. The concept of a scroll compressor has been around for more than a century, but it took recent advances in manufacturing technology to make the product a reality. A stationary scroll and a shifting scroll are the main components. Each is a precisely machined or solid involute spiral-shaped element.
In a typical layout, the second scroll is circled 180° with respect to the primary, which will allow the scrolls to mesh. They are surrounded by a flat base and cover. In a typical design, the second scroll is rotated 180° with respect to the first, which lets the scrolls mesh. They are bounded by a flat base and cover. The moving scroll mounts on an eccentric crank offset from the center of the stationary one. The drive motor moves the scroll body in an orbital fashion about the stationary scroll, but the scroll does not rotate.