“When you use a third-party BMS with Trane equipment, you get 80% of the data,” explains Sarah Jennings, a facilities director for a Midwest hospital system. “With Tracer, we get 100%. It recognizes the proprietary algorithms inside the chiller. It doesn’t just tell us the chiller is running; it tells us the refrigerant pressure is trending toward a failure two weeks from now.”
Looking ahead, Trane is quietly integrating into the Tracer portfolio. The goal is a fully autonomous building: one that self-commissions, predicts its own filter changes, and bids its flexible load into the energy grid when demand response prices spike. The Verdict For building owners stuck with 20-year-old controls, Trane Tracer software offers a compelling bridge. It turns a collection of noisy, expensive machines into a silent, coordinated asset. trane tracer software
More importantly, these controllers are cloud-connected out of the box. Using (the company’s cloud analytics portal), an owner can set up fault detection and diagnostics (FDD) without an on-premise server. The software learns the building’s thermal inertia. It knows that because tomorrow is forecast to be sunny on the west side of the office, it should precool that zone at 4:30 AM using cheaper off-peak electricity. The Real-World Math: Dollars and Decarbonization The feature that sells Tracer isn’t the graphics—it’s the ledger. “When you use a third-party BMS with Trane
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