air compressor repair

   / air compressor repair #32  
   / air compressor repair #33  
And thats precisely why you dont patch old, rotten tanks with screws or weld..... Or plumb your shop with PVC. Its also why my 60 Gal is Hilti bolted to the floor.

Pressure vessels are scary stuff when they go boom.

If a compressor decides go blow from a ignition source..It do no think it matters how new or old it is.
 
   / air compressor repair #34  
If a compressor decides go blow from a ignition source..It do no think it matters how new or old it is.

That tank in the Aussie link was a rare occurrence. Sure you can have oil in the receiver for any oiled compressor, but 1. getting it to ignition temp under pressure, and 2. getting the proper air:fuel mix to have an explosion is considerably rarer than a rust through situation that were talking about here.

All compressors make water, which creates rust. This is in 100% of compressors and something we all need to address. Being cheap here for the sake of a couple hundred for a new tank (or compressor if its a small one) is crazy.

Suggesting that 150 PSI is harmless is also foolish. Recommending either directly or through personal experience that anyone patches a hole in a rusted tank with a screw or similar is downright dangerous and could have fatal consequences.

Having worked around large industrial compressors and boilers, i can tell you that anyone in the industry treats them with the utmost respect. Ask just about any Stationary Engineer with experience what can happen when things go bad.
 
   / air compressor repair #35  
I had lunch with my friend who is a retired pressure pipe welder.

He said over the years he probably welded on 40 air tanks, in his shop, for various reasons. Usually because someone broke something off off it. I asked about the explosion risk, he said, "I am still here".

Then he said, "Maybe, but when you've welded on fuel tanks, petroleum pipe lines, and high pressure gas lines, an air tank is not that scary".
 
   / air compressor repair #36  
I work on large industrial chillers and boilers. Years ago,a man I knew was taking the end bell off of McQuay/westinghouse centrifugal chiller. The end bell was 1" thick and about 24" round. He had recovered the refrigerant out of the system that morning. Unfortunately, the temperature rose in the room as the day progressed, and the residual refrigerant that boiled out of the oil raised the internal pressure to about 3psi.When he got the remaining bolts out of the end bell,he tapped it to unstick the gasket. It blew the end bell into him,killing him. So...remember,3 psi is 3 pounds per square inch. There was alot of square inches in that 24 inch circle.
 
   / air compressor repair #37  
That tank in the Aussie link was a rare occurrence. Sure you can have oil in the receiver for any oiled compressor, but 1. getting it to ignition temp under pressure, and 2. getting the proper air:fuel mix to have an explosion is considerably rarer than a rust through situation that were talking about here.

All compressors make water, which creates rust. This is in 100% of compressors and something we all need to address. Being cheap here for the sake of a couple hundred for a new tank (or compressor if its a small one) is crazy.

Suggesting that 150 PSI is harmless is also foolish. Recommending either directly or through personal experience that anyone patches a hole in a rusted tank with a screw or similar is downright dangerous and could have fatal consequences.

Having worked around large industrial compressors and boilers, i can tell you that anyone in the industry treats them with the utmost respect. Ask just about any Stationary Engineer with experience what can happen when things go bad.

You would have to prove to me that any failed compressor tank exploded with just air pressure of 160lbs and not from a explosion..Compressed air gets very hot when it is delivered to the storage tank. which makes me believe that the explosion factor is the cause.

I just need more proof..To me it would be just as rare of a occurrence for either to happen.
 
   / air compressor repair #38  
You would have to prove to me that any failed compressor tank exploded with just air pressure of 160lbs and not from a explosion..Compressed air gets very hot when it is delivered to the storage tank. which makes me believe that the explosion factor is the cause.

I just need more proof..To me it would be just as rare of a occurrence for either to happen.
Ummm...did you read the link I posted? First hand experience. None of this "I heard about a guy business..." The guy who got clobbered posted about it. With pictures.
 
   / air compressor repair #39  
Ummm...did you read the link I posted? First hand experience. None of this "I heard about a guy business..." The guy who got clobbered posted about it. With pictures.

Was it a explosion? or just air rupture? Who knows for sure? Just saying..Did I miss that part?
 
   / air compressor repair #40  
those tanks arnt designed to reach 150psi.....it exploded from excessive pressure.

my 80 gal air compressor is bolted down to the floor.
 

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