

Yup, lots of options, depending on when/if I need them. Air delivery is as follows
i suspect you have little water being collected in the tank.Oscar wrote: ↑Tue Oct 05, 2021 7:02 pmNow my problem is moisture. I have two Ingersol-Rand water separators, and they work.....too well. 30 seconds using one of those babies (the 3M grinder) and they are both full (~ 8oz water collected between the both of them).I am on the verge of ordering a refrigerated dryer, but I'm not so sure. I don't think the problem is getting the water to separate since it already travels down 100 ft of air hose into the garage, it's just the sheer volume of water that is being collected and needs to be expelled, IMO. I need a 20 gallon water separator tank!
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Actually they're all plumbed together in parallel. They feed a single regulator and then then it splits into the two water separators (that I thought would be sufficient when I built the system, LOL). I pretty much leave the system at about 100psi so that it maintains 90psi when high-flow tools are wide-open and air is actually flowing through. The 10HP compressor has a 175 off/140 on setting, so it will kick on at 140psi. The 1.7HP compressor has a 165 off/125 on setting on it's switch, so if it drops to 125psi it will start to feed the system, and the 2HP compressor has a 140 off/100 on setting, so if it still drops even further down to 100 psi then it will kick on and feed the system in an attempt to sustain the airflow needed.
Yep, during high-flow usage, I don't think any water (newly-ingested) is collecting in the tank due to the needed air volume being consumed. There's plenty of water in the tank during intermittent usage, but then once the compressor kicks on, it's too warm to collect at the tank and just flows right through and cools down in the 100ft hose run to the garage.tweake wrote: ↑Wed Oct 06, 2021 12:05 am
i suspect you have little water being collected in the tank.
the air is cooling down in the pipe to the garage which turns the moisture into water.
so one fix is to cool it down at the compressor and let it fill the tank.
the other is to slope the pipe up so the water drains back into the tank (tho needs to be a big diameter pipe).
typically i have a drip leg fitted before the filter/water separator with an auto drain. that deals with the bulk of the water.
with wet pipe systems you want to make sure its got a good slope and no place for water to accumulate. otherwise it accumulates water during normal use, and the high flow usage picks it up and blows it out. you end up with a weeks worth of water in your separator all at once.
if air velocity is to high it won't be able to maintain flow or pressure anyway.
the timer ones are more suited to setups that run a more consistent load. ie like a shop that runs the same machine all day long at a constant rate.
they are not " coalescing filters with floats. "Oscar wrote: ↑Sat Oct 09, 2021 10:44 am something like this?
https://www.amazon.com/PneumaticPlus-SA ... op?ie=UTF8
or this
https://www.amazon.com/Pneumatic-Automa ... =8-66&th=1
Thanks for the suggestion. These never popped up on my previous searches for water traps, so I didn't really know about them. I will for sure put one on the compressor and also figure out a way to plumb one into the manifold at the outlet in my garage. I think they are exactly what I need. Better yet, I think I might install an fan-cooled intercooler on the pump outlet before it goes into the tank to try to catch as much as I can before it goes down the hoses into the garage. Big thanks Tweake!tweake wrote: ↑Sat Oct 09, 2021 7:31 pmthey are not " coalescing filters with floats. "Oscar wrote: ↑Sat Oct 09, 2021 10:44 am something like this?
https://www.amazon.com/PneumaticPlus-SA ... op?ie=UTF8
or this
https://www.amazon.com/Pneumatic-Automa ... =8-66&th=1
the bottom one is similar to what we have, tho the variable outlet is a neat touch.
the first one is a drip leg rather than a one for a compressor tank. a little odd that it says its 10 mic filter but no filter shown. typically the have a mesh screen like the 2nd one.
just something to stop big bits from blocking the valve.
the mechanism used is simply a float. so it blows water out when there is actually some, unlike a timer which lets out air even when there is no water.
there is air saver versions of timer ones but they are pricey.
what some people do is fit a drip leg one after the cooler. even if its a semi-auto one which drains when there is no air pressure, eg when the compressor stops.Oscar wrote: ↑Sat Oct 09, 2021 8:04 pm
Thanks for the suggestion. These never popped up on my previous searches for water traps, so I didn't really know about them. I will for sure put one on the compressor and also figure out a way to plumb one into the manifold at the outlet in my garage. I think they are exactly what I need. Better yet, I think I might install an fan-cooled intercooler on the pump outlet before it goes into the tank to try to catch as much as I can before it goes down the hoses into the garage. Big thanks Tweake!![]()
Exactly my thought, using the drip leg version immediately after the fan-cooled aftercooler, before the tank. I'm actually still considering a refrigerated cooler, but I think a few of these float type separators in the right places will help out tremendously.tweake wrote: ↑Sat Oct 09, 2021 8:58 pmwhat some people do is fit a drip leg one after the cooler. even if its a semi-auto one which drains when there is no air pressure, eg when the compressor stops.Oscar wrote: ↑Sat Oct 09, 2021 8:04 pm
Thanks for the suggestion. These never popped up on my previous searches for water traps, so I didn't really know about them. I will for sure put one on the compressor and also figure out a way to plumb one into the manifold at the outlet in my garage. I think they are exactly what I need. Better yet, I think I might install an fan-cooled intercooler on the pump outlet before it goes into the tank to try to catch as much as I can before it goes down the hoses into the garage. Big thanks Tweake!![]()
but you cannot have any filter in it.
getting the water out early makes life easy for the downstream pipes.
the other plus is if its a piston compressor cooling between pump and tank will dry the air a bit more due to the slightly higher air pressure.