#4539435 - 10/04/20 01:04 PM
Dead compressor regulator
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Joined: Dec 2002
Posts: 19,381
Ajay
newbie
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newbie
Veteran
Joined: Dec 2002
Posts: 19,381
Brisbane OZ
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Regulator has a bit hissy the last few weeks, pulled it off and redid all of the fittings with new thread tape which seemed to sort it. Tonight it would fill up to required psi and then it would go all hissy, stay at roughly that psi but keep leaking. Couldn't find anything obvious but it felt like it was coming out of the gauge. Stripped that off and plugged the hole with my finger and found another hole above it that was the issue. No idea what that hole was, pressure relief in case of some internal failure maybe? Time to pull down the reg and have a look inside. After stripping it down the problem was found... Reg split apart Pressure valve/check valve Where the valve seats What was left inside the filter mount once i split the valve from the filter section. Ze culprit! Spring rusted and collapsed. There doesn't seem to be anything else to pull apart, the white gear simply slips off and i will pull the fittings off again and give it all a good flush. So, off tomorrow to find a new spring, one that is nicely joined and springy, and not all separated into single rings.
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#4539568 - 10/05/20 04:03 PM
Re: Dead compressor regulator
[Re: Ajay]
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Joined: Mar 2001
Posts: 17,301
Nixer
Scaliwag and Survivor
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Scaliwag and Survivor
Veteran
Joined: Mar 2001
Posts: 17,301
Living with the Trees
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We had a pair of large electrical air compressors on the boats I worked on for years.
They were running all the time as the controls were all air over hydraulic. Surprisingly few issues ever with any of them. Mostly the fact that the older they got the more water they made while compressing air, constantly draining the air storage tanks and water traps on air lines. If you didn't you were asking for trouble.
With all that rust Ajay, I wonder if yours is making a lot of water?
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#4539600 - 10/05/20 09:26 PM
Re: Dead compressor regulator
[Re: Nixer]
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Joined: May 2010
Posts: 5,534
Alicatt
Hotshot
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Hotshot
Joined: May 2010
Posts: 5,534
Ice Cold in Alex or Eating in ...
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We had a pair of large electrical air compressors on the boats I worked on for years.
They were running all the time as the controls were all air over hydraulic. Surprisingly few issues ever with any of them. Mostly the fact that the older they got the more water they made while compressing air, constantly draining the air storage tanks and water traps on air lines. If you didn't you were asking for trouble.
With all that rust Ajay, I wonder if yours is making a lot of water? Was thinking the same, also is the compressor up to the job? In one place I worked I had to constantly repair the compressor, then I added up the demand from all the machines that used the compressed air it was more than 4 times what the compressor could deliver, I was constantly running around emptying the water traps and seeing how much mayo was in them, I persuaded the owner of the company that what he was doing was false economy and I picked out a 18cft/min compressor to replace the 2cft/min one, after it was installed I could finally get the machines to work at their designed speed - mind you the staff complained that everything was too fast now We had 2 high speed cassette winders with a 3rd one on order they used 3.5cft/min each, a cassette labelling machine that used 3.4cft/min and a packaging machine that used 2.4cft/min the labelling machine just did not work with the old compressor, there was not enough air once the small reservoir was depleted, the winders just ran slow all the time and the compressor was working hard all the time, eventually it seized, at that point I had been warning the management for more than a month that it was going to fail, it took going over their head to the owner to get it sorted, and I made an enemy in the management
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#4539624 - 10/06/20 02:35 AM
Re: Dead compressor regulator
[Re: Ajay]
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Joined: Dec 2002
Posts: 19,381
Ajay
newbie
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newbie
Veteran
Joined: Dec 2002
Posts: 19,381
Brisbane OZ
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The comp is an Hseng AS186 chinese cheapy, 1/6 hp with a 3 litre tank. When i was looking for an airbrush setup, back when i did my first 190 last year, it seemed to be the most common entry level (with a tank) comp most modellers were using. I'm generally pretty good with emptying the tank after every session and then i let it sit with the drain bung out overnight. The reg i empty whenever i see any moisture build up. She is definitely rusty inside I spray at between 12 and 20 psi so she doesn't work very hard, or for very long normally, 10-20 minute bursts of action. The summer humidity here probably doesn't help it out. Edit - with the new reg i will be pulling it apart and cleaning out the brass filter and spring from now on to delay the inevitable.
Last edited by Ajay; 10/06/20 02:37 AM.
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Exodus
by RedOneAlpha. 04/18/24 05:46 PM
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