cracker39 wrote:I know I'm boring the pants (skirts?) off most of you with all this BS detail. But, I have a plan. ...
GPW wrote:C39, check for moisture in your compressor, that'll make it spit too ...
GPW wrote:just trying to help ...
cracker39 wrote:... it started spitting tiny water drops. In desperation, I hooked up another hose (100' total now) and finished that side and the other without any more water drops.
cracker39 wrote:I had looked at my filter and saw no accumulated water it it. I removed it from the compressor, and started to unscrew the drain valve when I saw it was already loose. That probably caused the compressor to run harder to put out air thru the hoses. Would air getting out the bottom of the filter prevent the water in the air from being removed? Is that why I was getting water thru the hose? I need to know how to solve this problem before I start the 2nd coat in the morning. .
cracker39 wrote:OK, GPW, or anyone else with experience with this problem, opinions/answers? The filter is the ....with the oiler removed for painting.
cracker39 wrote: Would air getting out the bottom of the filter prevent the water in the air from being removed? Is that why I was getting water thru the hose? I need to know how to solve this problem before I start the 2nd coat in the morning. The filter is the HF dual filter/oiler with the oiler removed for painting.
goldcoop wrote:cracker39 wrote:You removed the oiler for painting, but are you using the same hose you used for air tools with the oiler attached?:roll:
So you aren't having a oil in the hose problem, right?:thinking:
Just a thought...
Cheers,
Coop
Artificer wrote:Get a large bucket/bushel basket/barrel. Coil the first set of hose after the compressor in the barrel. Then put a filter in line, then the rest of the hose to the sprayer. Cover the hose with ice and water. This system works even better if you combine it with the roll of copper tubing idea
Return to Teardrop Construction Tips & Techniques
Users browsing this forum: Google [Bot] and 5 guests