UPDATE:
It looks like the moisture I was noticing was from water that had accumulated in the fill hose from my 100cc Portable Air Venturi Tank. This is how it happened: I usually have the tank sitting up on a workbench, while the compressor is down on the floor. So as the water condensed inside of the hose it would flow down to the compressor's moisture reservoir. Every time I had filled the gun in the past, when I was done filling and I bled the line, about 1/2 tsp of water would come out of the compressors moisture reservoir.
During the last couple fills I was using the compressor in the field and it was being powered by my car. So I stupidly had the compressor sitting up on the car and the tank was 4 feet below on the ground. So all the water that was condensing in the hose was flowing toward the tank instead of the compressor. Thinking back I remember noticing that I there wasn't any water coming out of the compressor when I opened the bleed valve. All that water was still in the hose.
I detached the hose and there was about 1/2 tsp of water inside. I dried it out and now I'm not noticing any water in the quick connectors after filling the gun, or when bleeding the line. I disassembled the gun, bottle, and air tank, all were completely dry and showed no signs that there had ever been any moisture.
Next time I'm filling in the field using my car for power I'll put the tank on the roof.
I made an air filling station with a coalescing filter in between the compressor and tank. There a lot of debate if a filter is necessary, but I figure it can’t hurt.
Thanks again for all the help guys.
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ORIGINAL POST:
I just realized that the air used for the last several fills/top-offs of the 500cc bottle of my Impact contained inadequately dried air. I noticed this during the last fill when I removed the hose from the gun and there were a couple drops of water around the fill nipple. Then when I bled the line of the 100 cui fill tank, the air was misty and left a damp spot on my pant leg. Very bad!
I’m asking for recommendations on how to best move forward in terms of removing all moisture from the gun, replacing/repairing o-rings or other parts that may be damaged.
As for the bottle and fill tank, I’m thinking it should be straight forward: degass and remove the valves, clean, dry.
As for the gun, I’m guessing I should take the gun completely apart - or at least until I can access the inside of the plenum, carefully drying everything as I go with lint-free wipes, swabs, maybe a blow drier. And relubing all o-rings that don’t appear to be damaged.
I’ve since corrected the moist air issue with an improved filtering setup, so this wont be happening again. I’m very frustrated with myself for not being more knowledgeable about proper air filtering before I started using the gun.
Thanks for the help guys.
Dale
It looks like the moisture I was noticing was from water that had accumulated in the fill hose from my 100cc Portable Air Venturi Tank. This is how it happened: I usually have the tank sitting up on a workbench, while the compressor is down on the floor. So as the water condensed inside of the hose it would flow down to the compressor's moisture reservoir. Every time I had filled the gun in the past, when I was done filling and I bled the line, about 1/2 tsp of water would come out of the compressors moisture reservoir.
During the last couple fills I was using the compressor in the field and it was being powered by my car. So I stupidly had the compressor sitting up on the car and the tank was 4 feet below on the ground. So all the water that was condensing in the hose was flowing toward the tank instead of the compressor. Thinking back I remember noticing that I there wasn't any water coming out of the compressor when I opened the bleed valve. All that water was still in the hose.
I detached the hose and there was about 1/2 tsp of water inside. I dried it out and now I'm not noticing any water in the quick connectors after filling the gun, or when bleeding the line. I disassembled the gun, bottle, and air tank, all were completely dry and showed no signs that there had ever been any moisture.
Next time I'm filling in the field using my car for power I'll put the tank on the roof.
I made an air filling station with a coalescing filter in between the compressor and tank. There a lot of debate if a filter is necessary, but I figure it can’t hurt.
Thanks again for all the help guys.
==============
ORIGINAL POST:
I just realized that the air used for the last several fills/top-offs of the 500cc bottle of my Impact contained inadequately dried air. I noticed this during the last fill when I removed the hose from the gun and there were a couple drops of water around the fill nipple. Then when I bled the line of the 100 cui fill tank, the air was misty and left a damp spot on my pant leg. Very bad!
I’m asking for recommendations on how to best move forward in terms of removing all moisture from the gun, replacing/repairing o-rings or other parts that may be damaged.
As for the bottle and fill tank, I’m thinking it should be straight forward: degass and remove the valves, clean, dry.
As for the gun, I’m guessing I should take the gun completely apart - or at least until I can access the inside of the plenum, carefully drying everything as I go with lint-free wipes, swabs, maybe a blow drier. And relubing all o-rings that don’t appear to be damaged.
I’ve since corrected the moist air issue with an improved filtering setup, so this wont be happening again. I’m very frustrated with myself for not being more knowledgeable about proper air filtering before I started using the gun.
Thanks for the help guys.
Dale
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