SAFETY ALERT!
Tuxing Water Separator Bleed Screw Becomes a Projectile Under Pressure
I wasn't going to post this but figured I should as the possibility of injury is pretty high.
I had a bleed screw slammed hard into my hand yesterday while opening it near 250 BAR.
Here is what happened
- Closed the bleed valve snugly, on the gun side of the water trap / filter in preparation for filling a gun.
- Opened the shutoff valve between water trap that was at 250 BAR, and the bleed screw assembly, on the gun side of the water trap, to allow the compressed air in the water trap to equalize in the fill line on the gun side before starting the compressor.
- Once the pressure hit the previously unpressurized lines, air could be heard escaping from the bleed screw assembly.
- Tightened the knob on the bleed screw slightly to stop the flow with no change.
- Closed the shutoff valve between the water trap and the bleed screw.
- Started to open the bleed screw to release the pressure in the lines and it shot out of the threaded insert and slammed into the palm of my hand with significant force and pain with a very loud BANG.! The pressure was for sure less than the starting pressure of 250 BAR since air had been escaping, but I did not make a note of it.
- The volume of air would have only been what was in the whips and a small water filter which had the bleed screw assembly in it.
(Fortunately, due to the fairly large frontal surface of the knob on the bleed screw, there was no serious damage to my hand. It felt like what trying to catch a golf ball sized rock that someone had thrown pretty hard might be like. - At least one expletive was heard in the room. I am assuming spoken by me.
- After removal and inspection of the assembly I could tell that the threads on the screw body had been sheared off enough to allow the screw assembly to be blown free of the threaded insert it was in.
- Replaced it with a new, complete bleed screw assembly I had on hand.
- Back to normal function now. (But it is not safe in my opinion!!)
Some other observations
- The area on the bleed screw where the tops of the threads were stripped off is showing brass underneath.
- On very close inspection, the threads in the insert that was in place when the bleed screw failed look perfect. The steel is very hard as well, compared to some other stainless parts I have. I don't think the problem was the insert.
- The "fit" of a new bleed screw of the same type with threaded insert is very loose both front to back and side to side rattling on all three assemblies I have of this type - which concerns me. I never noticed how sloppy the fit was until now.
- I can press the stripped screw into all three of the threaded inserts I have, almost 1/4" without turning it. The replacement "good" screw will not enter the fitting at all by pressing it in.
- The visible thread damage on the screw is 0.30" long which is pretty much the amount of threads that are inside the insert when the valve is closed.
- While waiting for replacements, I am going to see if I can find a tight fitting metric grade 8 steel screw to use instead of these brass screws.
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