Attachment 6925 home made filter dryer Attachment 6924 cheap 95 percent dessicant.
Printable View
Attachment 6925 home made filter dryer Attachment 6924 cheap 95 percent dessicant.
Thats a good idea Rod, may have to look into doing something like that in the future, can't ever have TOO dry of air right?
has a bung plug on top to fill and a bung plug on bottom to drain litter use a piece of stainless steel welding rod to knock the stuff loose to fall out of bottom plug hole. oh this is not my dryer i am making one but using a different container so easier to change dissnent . was going to use water filter housing since easy to open and dump stuff and refill and there rated a 150 psi http://www.ebay.com/itm/10-whole-Hou...item35a33cdf15
Here is something to add to your air system to remove water a "Franzinator"
http://www.shopfloortalk.com/forums/...ead.php?t=8431
have fun
Tom
I also use the motorgaurd and it is great. Down the road I might make something like Rods setup but only if the motorguard starts to fail and its not the a quick filter change fix.
I welded up 2 one for my buddy, we installed his but he does not use his compressor that much.
Mine still needs to be installed but there are many on the web that use them.
hav fun
Tom
I received the Motorguard filter today. Super quick shipping from Tooltopia. I'm impressed.
That is a good idea for sure. I may build one just for the heck of it, I need to put something coming directly off my compressor to keep the moisture out of my air tools.
Something I did at one shop that really helped keep the moisture out of the air was to run the piping up to the ceiling from the compressor. Then I had a drop of pipe almost to the floor, and installed a normal water trap there, then back up to the ceiling to run to the rest of the shop.
Giant P trap with a water trap in it. If I can get the parts at Home Depot I will make Franzinator, otherwise might try that. Thanks
That's a good idea. It allows the air to cool as much as possible. Cooler air allows the moisture in the air to condense which then drops to your water tap.
So along this line of thought, wouldn't the Franzinator work better further away from the compressor where the air is cooler? The air expands in the Franzinator, further cooling it and extracting as much moisture as possible? If the air is hot, the Franzinator will be hotter than it could be and the air might not want to let go of its moisture as easily(?)
I just love the name franzinator...
It was mostly gravity that was at work here. The moisture would fall out of suspension in the air. The temp of the air was pretty stable by then. It would only cool at the point of expansion which for standard air tools was at the tool valve. Not much if any pressure drop in the lines, so no real cooling taking place.
I can see how if you had an expansion tank right after the pump and before the tank, you would get a real cooling effect. Also most larger compressors have some kind of heat exchanger in the lines leaving the pump going to the tank. That would help to condense out moisture, too.