The Ultimate DIY Compressed Air Dryer For Your Shop (Part 1 of 2)

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  • čas přidán 26. 08. 2024
  • In this video I show how to build the ultimate clean air setup for your shop. This work great when paired with a plasma cutter, paint sprayer, sand blasting cabinet and a host of other air tools used in your shop.
    Long term review of this system and your feedback and ideas video.
    • How To Make The Ultima...
    For more DIY build plans check out my website. becksarmory.com/
    Follow all the changes in the Beck's Armory shop on Facebook / becksarmory
    Ship your products with the company that I use for Beck's Armory. :)
    blue.mbsy.co/6...
    Use the plasma cutter and welders that I use in the Beck's Armory shop
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    Cool stuff on Amazon
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    Beck's Armory may receive compensation for links above.

Komentáře • 471

  • @BecksArmory
    @BecksArmory  Před rokem +16

    Thanks for watching this video. Now that this video is a couple years old a couple of the same questions come up a lot in the comments bellow. I've made a part 2 that covers the question you're about to ask. :) Here is a link to part 2 czcams.com/video/1eenVNNAHa8/video.html

    • @BigDaddy-yp4mi
      @BigDaddy-yp4mi Před rokem +2

      expanding gas cools....the entrance to the copper pipe also has a throat expansion. That's where a majority of your action is. Placing pipe size step-downs right before your drains and a step-up right after a drain will make a huge difference because air that expands cools down instantly from pressure drop which causes it's moisture to hang on whatever surface in that immediate area that it can. I'd suggest some form of washable media, glass tiny marbles and such put right in-between the step up & step down to give more surface area for moisture to settle on, drawing it out of the air. There's a lot of thermodynamics and Bernoulli's principles at work and you gave me the idea on how to design the perfect setup to provide continuous clean air. Thanks man!

  • @tinnedanger
    @tinnedanger Před rokem +93

    Just a suggestion... Plumb your condenser directly from the compressor pump through the condenser then into the tank. You'll have much less water in your tank.

    • @l33b80
      @l33b80 Před rokem +6

      Yes! this was gonna be my comment also

    • @andrewfredrick7017
      @andrewfredrick7017 Před rokem +1

      I did exactly that using an old a/c evaporator from a whole house air handler.

    • @satxsatxsatx
      @satxsatxsatx Před rokem +4

      When I finally figured out the sequence, I was amazed to find that his condenser was after the tank rather than into the tank
      Dry air into the tank allows the tank to last longer since probably it is not coated,

    • @saiae
      @saiae Před rokem +4

      I came here to say this.
      The cooling/drying loop is in the wrong place.

    • @peetky8645
      @peetky8645 Před 5 měsíci

      YES, that is the appropriate way to do it.......also, smaller tube is better because air volume/tube surface is lower, although air speed is higher.

  • @Rodzilla-du3pp
    @Rodzilla-du3pp Před 3 lety +86

    I noticed the clamps you used to mount the copper pipes to the wall look like steel. If they are you may run into problems with galvanic corrosion. Eventually the steel will react and create a hole in the pipe where steel is contacting the copper. You should change those out to copper or brass clamps and you'll be good to go. Just thought I'd let you know.

    • @BecksArmory
      @BecksArmory  Před 3 lety +19

      Yes, I forgot about that. good point

    • @cybersurfer2010
      @cybersurfer2010 Před 3 lety +29

      Just add some insulator so there is no contact between the copper and steel...

    • @AN-kg4ei
      @AN-kg4ei Před 2 lety

      @@BecksArmory pipe wrap or a cut rubber hose will fix that....

    • @SuperNolaguy
      @SuperNolaguy Před rokem +14

      Old Plumber here, wrap cotton cloth electrical tape around copper tubing where clamp makes contact. Also mutes the tubing if there are any harmonics. 😉

    • @MrTheHillfolk
      @MrTheHillfolk Před rokem

      ​@@SuperNolaguy went thru the basement and did this recently.
      I have an LG washer machine ,and when it begins filling it kicks the water on and off at first in 1 second spurts for whatever reason the silly microchip wants it to for about 20 seconds.
      (actually I guess they're trying to figure out the load size somehow from what I've read ,it's one of those units that washes and dries all in the same basket).
      Talk about annoying squeaks all over as it cycles, but I fixed em as you described.

  • @JoeGraves24
    @JoeGraves24 Před 3 lety +34

    Going from 1/4” tube to 1” tube is actually a 1:16 ratio in area. That means the air velocity ‘practically’ slows down 16 times. That’s an amazing amount of surface area for condensation to happen. I love the overkill!!

    • @BecksArmory
      @BecksArmory  Před 3 lety +1

      It works really well! I still have not had a single drop of water in my two SMC water separators since I installed this months ago.

    • @miguelpadron5984
      @miguelpadron5984 Před 2 lety +1

      Would it work if I make it out of 1/2

    • @JoeGraves24
      @JoeGraves24 Před 2 lety

      @@miguelpadron5984 it would likely work but you’d need 4x the pipe to equal the drying power of this setup.

    • @Jcreek201
      @Jcreek201 Před rokem +5

      It's a 16x increase in the cross-sectional area of the pipe, but not a 16x increase of the internal surface area. It's only about a 4x increase in surface area. The real advantage is the pressure drop due to the larger diameter pipe causing the air cool and moisture to condense.

    • @JoeGraves24
      @JoeGraves24 Před rokem

      @@Jcreek201 absolutely correct on the surface area. I was making a comment on the cross sectional area because it slows down the velocity of the air by a factor of 16, thus increasing the exposure to the increased interior surface area. I used to be able to figure that out with fluid dynamics once upon a time. Thank you for the correction!

  • @rexhartung2385
    @rexhartung2385 Před rokem +4

    I've been a car painter for over 40 years the thing I do is I just crack the petcock leader valve on the bottom of the tank till you hear a hiss and I never have any water build-up in my lines at all😊

  • @DCS_Garage
    @DCS_Garage Před rokem +22

    You could T all your drain ports at the bottom together with a single lowest horizontal run if you slope the horizontal pipe downwards then you could have just one drain valve. That's about the only improvement I can think of to the flow and ease of use of your system. Looks good.

    • @Tkaya460
      @Tkaya460 Před rokem

      And then putting a solenoid valve or other electronically actuated valve on it so you could add automation to the draining of the dryer.

    • @chucknSC
      @chucknSC Před rokem +6

      Nope. That would allow air flow to bypass the vertical tubes. That air wouldn’t have been cooled and thus would carry humidity out the outlet.

    • @Tkaya460
      @Tkaya460 Před rokem

      @@chucknSC check valves

    • @BigDaddy-yp4mi
      @BigDaddy-yp4mi Před rokem

      @@Tkaya460 this sub-sub thread should die. it's just making the theoretical setup more and more complicated.

    • @Tkaya460
      @Tkaya460 Před rokem

      @@BigDaddy-yp4mi where would the fun be in that?

  • @IRDeezlSmoke
    @IRDeezlSmoke Před rokem +4

    I too have a cnc plasma table and have been running this configuration for 4 years. 1" iron pipe with ball valves like yours. It works. Period. It removes and amazing amount of the water and cools the air quite well.
    I have a larger table than you, and also include a refrigerated air dryer in my air supply loop. It does very little on short jobs, but on high amp, high air usage jobs, the compressor runs a lot and the refrigerated air dryer is needed. Made a huge cut quality improvement.

    • @fiskfarm
      @fiskfarm Před rokem

      I made one like yours about 25 years ago and it still works great. No issues with the black iron pipe at all. I mounted mine to a concrete wall for extra heat sink. 👍

    • @incolink
      @incolink Před 20 dny

      Iron makes a alot of sense Ive been pricing up the copper recently and I'm up for around 500$ i can put a condenser radiator in a refrigerator for half that price

  • @ThyAnarchist87
    @ThyAnarchist87 Před rokem +6

    I would think having a large down section above the valves would allow a spot for the water to build up that isn't inline with the air flow preventing the still water from being carried along with the air. Basically just have a section of pipe run straight down off the T before adding the valve.

  • @akbychoice
    @akbychoice Před 3 lety +11

    Using the baseboard heat pipes with fins will greatly increase heat dissipation.

  • @donaldshimkus539
    @donaldshimkus539 Před rokem +3

    Here's a thought, how about hydronic baseboard heater tubes with all those aluminum fins to help cool. I'm not sure what pressure they're rated for but most plumbing pipe is rated for 150 psi.

  • @ianmoore525
    @ianmoore525 Před rokem +3

    If I was making that, I would have the pipes running horizontally and slightly stretched so there is a slight fall on each run, just one drain in the bottom. The place I worked at in AU, who manufactured CNC plasma cutters and routers, the budget option for plasma cutters ( rather than a refrigerated dryer) was a toilet roll type dryer, toilet rolls don’t actually work as well, the proper ones are brown and different material. They work remarkably well.

    • @williamstock3007
      @williamstock3007 Před rokem

      Do you know how well these work in warmer climates? Would these fail to work in 40 Celsius?

  • @randykovalenko1236
    @randykovalenko1236 Před rokem +3

    Mount the coils on two horizontal 2 X 4’s to get them off the wall for more air contact. And yes use copper mounting strips.

  • @1ton4god
    @1ton4god Před 3 lety +9

    I'll tell you something that's helped me tremendously. Your air compressor sucks air from inside the shop. When you open those you atomized the air and moisture coming out of there. Then your air compressor in your shop sucks that are right back in. I will tell you if you exhaust those outside you will benefit tremendously from it. Just run some lines tying all four of them together and then one exit line going through the wall out above the roof you don't want them asking on the side of your building. Also you can tie the tank drain on the bottom of your tank into that also. Hope that helps period also will eliminate the staining on the wall:-). I am waiting on my langmeyer crossfire Pro should be here sometime before the end of the month.

    • @BecksArmory
      @BecksArmory  Před 3 lety +1

      yeah my Crossfire pro also creates a crazy amount of steam. It would be nice to put and exhaust hood above my table and send that steam and toxic fumes outside as well. After about 15 minutes of cutting the water in the table is so hot you can barely put your fingers in it to pull our parts. The 1 inch tubing works so well despite all these things it still removes 100% of the moistures. My SMC water separators have not collected even a single drop since I installed the copper system. I still want to vent the toxic metal fumes. That's way up there on my list.

    • @1ton4god
      @1ton4god Před 3 lety

      @@BecksArmory yeah that's why I'm a little nervous about setting mine up in my small shop.

  • @91rss
    @91rss Před 2 lety +2

    up north a guy posted his install using old hot water baseboard heater piping with the fins on it. woks amazing and got it at a scrap metal yard. also on the intake you put a second filter , It stops that sucking noise so you can stand next to the compressor and even talk.

  • @randygerman2176
    @randygerman2176 Před rokem +5

    The condensate drains do work better located on the opposite leg. The moisture will always be running down the pipe walls even when there is no flow and being heavier than air when there is flow it will tend to go in a straight line towards the dirt leg trap while the air will make the turn at the tee. Plumbing and pipefitting 101.

  • @MrRoscoj
    @MrRoscoj Před 3 lety +7

    I have one of these I built about a year ago. It works great! I used about 60 ft of 3/4” copper and my air is 99% dry.

    • @BecksArmory
      @BecksArmory  Před 3 lety

      Right on

    • @AlessioSangalli
      @AlessioSangalli Před 3 lety +1

      Hello how did you measure moisture content in the compressed air?

    • @BecksArmory
      @BecksArmory  Před 3 lety +2

      @@AlessioSangalli I have two additional commercial grade moisture separators down stream. After months of running they have not captured even a single drop of moisture. The on filters down to .01 microns. Every time I crack the valves on my copper cooling system I get lots of water. I know it's anecdotal but that doesn't mean it can't be true. It just means I don't have a measured value
      :)

    • @MrRoscoj
      @MrRoscoj Před 3 lety +1

      @@AlessioSangalli
      My neighbor checked mine for me. He has all the measuring equipment for work. He used a hygrometer. I also have a 5 micron brass filter and a small desiccant dryer.

    • @AlessioSangalli
      @AlessioSangalli Před 3 lety

      Ok!

  • @michaelheurkens4538
    @michaelheurkens4538 Před rokem +2

    To prevent the galvanic corrosion from the steel clamps, wrap several layers of electricians' tape on the copper. I would also recommend clamping only top OR bottom horizontal tubes to allow for the bit of expansion/contraction of the tubes. Verticle tubes pose no problems. For those wondering if copper can withstand the 150psi, I have been taught that properly soldered copper joints AND the tubing sidewall can normally handle up to the 300psi range. This allows for slightly frozen pipes without rupturing. Cheers from Alberta, Canada.

    • @BecksArmory
      @BecksArmory  Před rokem

      I cover this in part 2 if this video. :) It's in the pinned comment.

  • @butchs2337
    @butchs2337 Před 2 lety +2

    where i Live it was to hard to get 1" copper tubing so i went with 3/4" and about 60' total length, the compressor is in about 90 degree room upstairs here in South Florida, the lines go downstairs to the copper tubing that is in a 70 degree room and then goes into a 50 degree room where it is used to run the equipment, i also I put a cooler and water separator on like many others have done on youtube, the cooler takes out a lot of water, i have not yet hooked up the copper tubing to the system yet but very soon it will be done, when it is done i really expect almost no water in the lines, thanks a lot for the video it helped me a lot, i did all this at my job where i work, we were making so much water compressor works a lot, it is a 60 gal Husky 11.5 cfm

  • @Chris_In_Texas
    @Chris_In_Texas Před rokem +3

    Ideally you would want the cooler between the compressor itself and the tank. Otherwise you are just pumping wet air into the tank, drying the air before storage is possible is the way to go. 🤠👍 That is where you can take a old compact fridge and use coil of tubing with drain. Then use bucket of water in the fridge and have it cooled down as well. It will help take out the heat much better than just air to air inside the fridge.

  • @darrenfrith3958
    @darrenfrith3958 Před 3 lety +12

    These work excellent. The 1" tube is very smart. You can also make a pre-tank separator out of a vehicle condenser and a small tank or drop tube with a valve on the bottom. Basically you take the hard line directly from the compressor pump, attach that with flared fittings to the AC condenser, attach a T at the outlet of the condenser with a valve and a drop tube along the back of the main compressor tank and plumb back into the original tank inlet location at the top. Attach the condenser to the fan/pully cage of the compressor and viola, you keep water out of your main tank as well.

    • @oldowl4290
      @oldowl4290 Před 2 lety +5

      And the other main benefit is cooler air is more dense by volume. So if the air is sufficiently cooled before entering the tank it actually holds more air at the same given pressure than hot air at the same pressure. So by cooling and drying the air first before it enters the tank you make much better use of your storage tank.

    • @_mylastname
      @_mylastname Před rokem

      I'm definitely going to do that👍

  • @weathertrainsrandomniss1083

    Stumbled on this video. A dryer was not on my list but now it is. Cheers from Wisconsin.

    • @BecksArmory
      @BecksArmory  Před rokem +1

      Thanks for the feedback. :) I've made a follow up video with a lot more information if you want to take a deeper dive into this topic. Here is a link to part 2 czcams.com/video/1eenVNNAHa8/video.html

  • @BylliPierce
    @BylliPierce Před rokem +3

    You could pack the tubes with copper pan scrubbers too. That would increase the surface area dramatically

    • @BecksArmory
      @BecksArmory  Před rokem

      Thanks

    • @stephenholland6328
      @stephenholland6328 Před rokem

      That would increase resistance to flow. The surface area that matters is where heat moves from copper to surrounding air. That surface area is unaffected by internal sponges.

  • @m3chanist
    @m3chanist Před 10 měsíci +1

    Yes the larger tubes have a greater surface area, BUT they have a much worse surface area to volume ratio, which is the significant thing when you are trying to remove heat from that volume. Put plainly, a number of thin tubes of equal total volume to a few larger tubes provides much more surface area for that volume to dissipate heat through. Many thin tubes are significantly more efficient at removing heat than a few thick ones.

  • @Zappy1210
    @Zappy1210 Před 7 měsíci +2

    I have used an air cooled system in the past, they work ok. I now use water cooled system and it just works much better. Mine has 50 foot of 1/2 copper coiled into a 10 gallon barrel with a relief valve at the bottom in the water where water inside the line will collect and is pushed out automatically every time the compressor airs up. You just hear bubbles for 2 or 3 seconds or so after the compressor shuts off. No valves to open and close constantly, just add a bit of water now and then. I also run a single stage air compressor dryer for good measure but it has never shown any signs of moisture where when I ran air cooled the dryer still got a bit of moisture in it. I have run this for about 5 years now and have never had any moisture at all in my tank. I actually scoped inside the tank last summer, it looks shiny and new inside, no rust whatsoever.

    • @ryanbard9354
      @ryanbard9354 Před 4 měsíci

      What kind of relief valve did you use? I'm looking into doing a water cooled setup as well.

    • @Zappy1210
      @Zappy1210 Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@ryanbard9354 I don't recall where I got it from, but I ordered it offline for about $30.00 5 or so years ago. Think it was just a simple 120 PSI pressure relief valve. They had them from like 50 PSI all the way up to 200 PSI. I recommend getting it brass so it doesn't corrode under water, and get a bucket/barrel with a sealing lid to help keep water from evaporating. You'll have to leave a bit of air gap so the relief air can escape. I just have a 1/2 hole in my lid for that. I typically have to add about a gallon of water every 2 weeks or so to keep barrel full, little more if I use the air more than a normal week.

    • @ryanbard9354
      @ryanbard9354 Před 4 měsíci

      @@Zappy1210 if my compressor motor shuts off at 175 I should put in a 175 relief valve then? I've been scouring the internet trying to find info but not many people do water cooled setups (or they just don't record and share the info)

    • @Zappy1210
      @Zappy1210 Před 4 měsíci

      @@ryanbard9354 yes 175 would be your pressure relief valve. They typically have an adjustment screw to adjust 5 or 8 PSI for blow off. I believe mine I adjusted to like 119 to be sure it would cycle each time.
      Wish I could be more help, was a while ago when I did it and the pressure valve I remember was the tricky thing to find. They are out there though.

  • @ouimetco
    @ouimetco Před rokem

    I thought your video of really good. Natural and easy to follow. Like a normal working man. Not staged like most videos. Appreciate that.

  • @RYoung09
    @RYoung09 Před rokem

    I'm about to invest in a 4x8 plasma table. I'll be building a air dryer like this. Thanks for the video

  • @Booze_Rooster
    @Booze_Rooster Před rokem +1

    I just went through this nightmare. Finally got a decent compressor of my own and attempted to use different filters to reduce moisture using a gravity sandblasting gun on a truck axle. After several unsuccessful setups, I ended up getting an old DeVilbiss 803643 filter from a coworker. Got a new element for it and zip tied it to my compressor's frame. Ran a 30' spiral hose from the compressor to the filter inlet. Running the $0.75 harbor freight inline plastic filter just before the swivel fitting at the gun.
    Before I'd get about two hopper loads in before moisture started creeping past all the dumb transluscent dessicant filters I was using. The cheap plastic ones on their own were getting me two or three hopper loads each. After setting up a long enough hose for the water to condense, I can run my blasting gun practically indefinitely. Every bag of media I go down, I dump the tank and filter drain, then let it all charge back up while i swap the cheap plastic filter at the end of the hose. Not going to be my final setup but it works for the budget and space I have right now.

  • @funone8716
    @funone8716 Před 3 lety +3

    Putting stainless steel wool in the tubes (not packed to tightly but full) would help the water coalesce inside them. Also having a cheap box fan set on Low blowing on the pipes helps a lot as well. And instead of mounting flat on the wall stand it off by 1/2" so air can circulate all round the pipes.

    • @kmcwhq
      @kmcwhq Před 3 lety

      @@SystemsPlanetNot if it's 304 or 316 stainless.

    • @r.joseph8911
      @r.joseph8911 Před rokem +1

      @@SystemsPlanet …exactly what is your “role” in your garage? 😂

  • @realmetallurgist8493
    @realmetallurgist8493 Před rokem

    I built one of these years ago, using no more than three feet of 1/2" pipe. I have a little squirrel cage blower that blows on it. Works perfect. If the tube stays cool at the far end, then the apparatus is doing it's job.

  • @bt619x
    @bt619x Před 2 lety +2

    I like it and looks good. A cool tip I have for the compressor is cylindrical or floor mount vibration isolators from grangier. Divide the published compressor weight by four and get the closest match. Never vibrates the floor and literally floats on the isolators. Much quieter.

    • @AN-kg4ei
      @AN-kg4ei Před 2 lety +3

      mounted mine on 4 hockey pucks which worked very well as I slice the 2 closest to the wall to make up for floor height difference.

    • @bt619x
      @bt619x Před 2 lety

      Hockey pucks work too.

    • @onjofilms
      @onjofilms Před 8 měsíci

      @@AN-kg4ei I've put those under my washing machine. They work great.

  • @LarryBauerle
    @LarryBauerle Před 2 měsíci +1

    I built one per your video and it is amazing! Thank you!

    • @BecksArmory
      @BecksArmory  Před 2 měsíci

      Glad it helped!

    • @BecksArmory
      @BecksArmory  Před 2 měsíci

      I got to say. This feedback makes up for all the CZcams A******s lol Thanks for the feedback.

  • @fyzxman3293
    @fyzxman3293 Před rokem

    Thank you. I will watch part 2 to see if my questions are answered. If not I will ask in that comment section.

  • @dave7203
    @dave7203 Před 2 lety +3

    Thanks for the great video. Think I'm going to go with 3/4 inch. Lose 25% of the surface area but I can add an extra 10 ft of pipe for less and save a bunch on fittings. For some reason the local home stores are really proud of their 1" fittings.

    • @BecksArmory
      @BecksArmory  Před 2 lety

      yeah they are! That 1" stuff was expensive when I built mine but now the price is just crazy!

    • @johnversluis3084
      @johnversluis3084 Před rokem +1

      @@BecksArmory with ton air volume drop from 1/4 maybe run a 3/4 right out of the air tank I'm surprised that the plasma cutter doesn't have a problem with pressure drop and less volume

    • @F479999999999
      @F479999999999 Před 3 měsíci

      @@BecksArmoryyou should see the prices today lol

    • @BecksArmory
      @BecksArmory  Před 3 měsíci

      @@F479999999999 Yeah I've been told it's a fortune now. Too bad, this works so well. Given the current price of copper a harbor freight refrigerated dryer is prolly worth the money.

  • @wheels-n-tires1846
    @wheels-n-tires1846 Před rokem +1

    A great idea. I took a 30gal 200psi compressor, and plumbed it into the 35gal tank of my old compressor. It only sees 150 psi since it's rated at 165, but it's plenty, and i almost never have a low pressure problem, and most of the condensation is caught in the second tank. A drain loop in the steel pipe output catches pretty much anything left. But having said that, I could see adding a copy of your setup in the future!!!
    Now to just over engineer your setup a tad more, and link all the valves to a single handle...😅

  • @blackbear92201
    @blackbear92201 Před 3 lety +9

    Cool video. Love the 1" copper pipe idea. I wonder if you could use a "tree-like" structure for the 1" pipes, and use only 1 reservoir (any size) and 1 valve at the very bottom? Or some variation. thanks for posting! :D

    • @JoeKyser
      @JoeKyser Před rokem

      its called a collector and yes you can use it

  • @raymondless1036
    @raymondless1036 Před 3 lety +2

    Thank you, this will fix a whole lot of problems for me in my injection moulding business. Awesome idea and solution

    • @BecksArmory
      @BecksArmory  Před 3 lety

      Forge larger shops just use larger copper pipe.

  • @brucehanson4147
    @brucehanson4147 Před rokem +1

    Install this in a fridge to get a better dewpoint, anything to get a lower temp of the compressed air will condense even more moisture. For a one-time quick project I've thrown a coil of soft copper in a big garbage can and filled it with ice and put a water trap on the outlet.

  • @johnclamshellsp1969
    @johnclamshellsp1969 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Really great video. Now you gave me the idea to make a HD trans cooler for my RV/bus. The ones sold today are cheap China junk. I will have to braze the fittings thought for durability/vibration.

  • @oBseSsIoNPC
    @oBseSsIoNPC Před rokem

    Very nice build! Never thought of doing it this way, but I am going to try it. Only advice I have for you. Build a box, cage or separate room for the compressor. There is an extremely low chance, but the tank CAN fail and it will send shrapnel through the shop. Those large compressor tanks are serious bombs. I never trust any of them and at least have a heavy metal cage around them. The explosion will still rupture your eardrums, but it won't send pieces through your body as easily.
    90psi filled truck tires send men flying 20 ft. When they come apart.

  • @ottoolsen9676
    @ottoolsen9676 Před 2 lety

    made a simmilar setup years ago. but i used regular 200 mm diameter pipe, about 350 mm long weldig top an bottom to it, air in and out are in the sides at the top, a 200x250mm plate is welded inside it so the air/water mix, chrash into it , and the water get stuck on the plate, and falls down where a drain is, the air runns under the plate and up again at verry slow speed, works just fine, and you can add as many as you need to the system, in series, or everywhere else. we use them at the outlet aswell.

  • @walterashley149
    @walterashley149 Před rokem

    Instant Subscription!!!
    Wasn't even looking for this, but have been meaning to address the issue. Thank You!!!

  • @ironwooddesigns9532
    @ironwooddesigns9532 Před 3 lety +3

    I'm concerned about getting high volume out of this system since your inlet line is just 1/4" tubing. I like the Tee design; you are right, that angle can help condense moisture. So does cyclone rotation like the moisture separator design.
    I've thought about making one of these that resides in a fridge, freezer, or even a tub that can be temporarily filled with ice water. As you drop that temperature, more and more moisture will condense out.
    As others have said, the auto drain for your compressor is worth its weight in gold.

    • @butchs2337
      @butchs2337 Před 2 lety +1

      i made one like this but out of 3/4" copper tubing and it is mounted in a 70 degree room sometimes even colder there before it goes into a 50 degree room where we use the air

    • @MrTheHillfolk
      @MrTheHillfolk Před rokem +1

      The larger you can get the pipe ,the better.
      From what I see,it'll act as an accumulator and help with those initial air tool hits that drop the pressure off at first.

  • @peterd1234567890
    @peterd1234567890 Před rokem

    If you also put a regular just before this in side of the copper pipe and drop the presser down a bit expanding gas reduces temperature condensing more water

  • @alphabrewingcompany2323
    @alphabrewingcompany2323 Před 3 lety +1

    We built one for our compressed air system and it works great! Thanks for the suggestion.

    • @BecksArmory
      @BecksArmory  Před 3 lety

      Happy to help you out! Thanks for the feedback. It helps me out. :)

  • @highplainshollarhomestead3188

    You only need 1 valve. Remove all those valves, run a header across the bottom and tee into it at each loop. Run the header and a slight grade towards a valve at the end. Solves your wet wall problem and you only have to release 1 valve.

    • @15630scarusrd
      @15630scarusrd Před rokem +1

      The problem I see with this is that the air will take the path of least resistance and travel along the bottom header rather than up and down through all the pipe which is where it is cooled.

  • @michaelmolter8828
    @michaelmolter8828 Před 8 měsíci

    You could probably use 1/2 copper and those aluminum snap on fine for radiant heaters to get more heat flux cheaply.

  • @anonimous2451
    @anonimous2451 Před rokem +1

    Nice Set up. 1 critique if you will and perhaps a better mouse trap.. The Catcher tubes should be 4-6" long cause the 2" tubes are a lil too short IMHO. Other than that liked you're idea of the turbulence T and all. If you swap the output of your compressor to the dryer lines and then return via the Tank, you actually virtually eliminate ANY water vapor from your tank which extends its life. I personally added a double separator, macro/micro separators in tandem with an output regulator on the FIRST one and a desiccant dryer all in a single row lineup. My Plasma cutter has never seen a drop of contaminants. I also use it for painting cars/trucks/motorcycle fairings and pieces and it is flawless. I added an double oil tank with a clear glass jar for my air tools that is plug and play via a 3 way switched air flow valve to do air tool work on the aforementioned body parts. The oil is down line of the valve actuator so no danger in oil infused into my dry lines.
    My 2c worth.

  • @Thepriest39
    @Thepriest39 Před rokem

    I am in the process of making one of these. I am installing automatic drain valves instead of manual ball valves at the bottom of each run. This way I won't have to remember to drain them. I am also installing one on the air compressor tank drain.

    • @BecksArmory
      @BecksArmory  Před rokem

      I would like to do that at some point as well.

  • @DayClanTribe
    @DayClanTribe Před rokem

    Good idea to go big because that offsets the pressure drop you would experience adding that many feet to your overall line length.

  • @level7performance
    @level7performance Před 5 měsíci

    The cross sectional area of a circle grows with the square of the radius but the circumference only grows with the radius so from a surface area perspective larger diameter tube should be less effective since the volume increases much more than the surface area. In terms of pressure drop it's another story though.

  • @JoeKyser
    @JoeKyser Před rokem

    I use a collector with stub out ends. It offers more area to collect

  • @Patrick-xd8jv
    @Patrick-xd8jv Před rokem

    If you have room, 2” black pipe works fantastic and it also holds a large volume of air. Put your air filter at the outlet

    • @BecksArmory
      @BecksArmory  Před rokem

      I have filters. If you check out part 2 (link in pinned comment above) you'll see the difference between black pipe and copper. :)

  • @karljay7473
    @karljay7473 Před 3 lety +5

    Nice setup, I'm thinking of using an automotive A/C condenser for this. I want to cool and dry the air before it goes into the compressor tank. I wonder if those Harbor Freight $10 auto drain kits would work on that. You'd have to adapt the fittings onto the end, but then it would be 100% automatic.

    • @BecksArmory
      @BecksArmory  Před 3 lety

      It's all about surface area. The more the better.

    • @jerrybigrig9475
      @jerrybigrig9475 Před rokem

      Did you hook up the condenser..did it do what you thought..??

    • @karljay7473
      @karljay7473 Před rokem

      @@jerrybigrig9475 I ended up using a transmission cooler and it works great. I had to put it at an angle to make sure the water drains out and I used a small fan on it. It goes from too hot to touch, to room temp.

    • @chucknSC
      @chucknSC Před rokem

      I found those HF drainers are short-lived.

  • @joekerschner1672
    @joekerschner1672 Před rokem

    Awesome job!!!. Only change I would make is come out of compressor to drier than go into tank. This would keep tank clean and dry.

  • @MrW3iss
    @MrW3iss Před rokem +1

    Nice setup, thanks for sharing. I wonder if you could put pressure relief or pressure check valves at the bottom of the pipes where the condensation collects, instead of the manual valves. I'm not sure there would be enough pressure or if you want to relieve that much pressure... of course it could be regulated. Then they could all connect via tubes to an output drain or condensation tank. 🤔

  • @SergeiArkadjevich
    @SergeiArkadjevich Před 2 lety

    I have made one of those and never had any problems
    Spraying cars base clear
    ALL GOOD!!!
    just added automatic electric valve( Automatic Electronic Timed Air Compressor Condensate Auto Drain Valve) at the bottom of the compressor tank so it drops water out automaticly and dont accumulate inside getting tank rusty.

  • @ac4uv
    @ac4uv Před 2 lety +1

    Thanks for the good ideas and a clue on what works... That said, why don't you pull the water out of the circuit starting from the compressor, then put the dry air into the tank, then distribute... Would keep the tank free of water too, correct. Slow down the tank rust?

  • @mattharvey8712
    @mattharvey8712 Před rokem

    Bravo.............refrigerationd dryer ......desicant beads reuseable.........big tank........cheers

  • @brianjohnson3770
    @brianjohnson3770 Před rokem

    it's the change in direction as you have it doing most of your water separation... its called a drip leg in a propane system ...simply passing straight over a drop leg wouldn't work as well...I've used a similar but much smaller deal using black pipe with good results

  • @jameelrose
    @jameelrose Před měsícem

    Replace those valves with solenoids and build another manifold to bring them am back together and piped outside or into a drain.
    Then you can automate opening the solenoids periodically.

  • @AY-cj9kp
    @AY-cj9kp Před 2 lety +2

    Yeah, I did the same except longer copper tubes and L-type copper (not the M-type which is the thin wall regular). Works like a Swiss clock. Also, I took square wood beams 4”x4” approximately and drilled 1” holes at the copper pipe distances center to center. Then cut them along so the holes would be split. Then I clamped it over top portion and bottom portion of this copper assembly. This made the structure solid and easy to manage. Simply bolted it to the wall.

  • @1stMrSoundguy
    @1stMrSoundguy Před rokem

    sounds great i will try it out when i start finishing my shop thx for the info

  • @billburkhart
    @billburkhart Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you so much for doing this video, terrific information.

  • @jdwilliams5244
    @jdwilliams5244 Před 3 lety

    This is very helpful. I agree about getting steel close to Copper. I had a water leak in my house because a nail was 1/8" from my copper water line. Also, I think I will build a supporting frame and then screw the frame to the wall. Thank you for the video.

  • @kc6331gmail
    @kc6331gmail Před 3 lety +1

    Cool idea....FYI-1/4 - 1" =16xs volume. Twice the diameter of a set line equal 4 x the volume

  • @ThePete2432
    @ThePete2432 Před 3 lety +2

    Look up automatic electric tank drain kit and buy it. We use those on building pneumatics religiously

    • @BecksArmory
      @BecksArmory  Před 3 lety

      Thanks for the heads up! I'll look into this.

  • @sanitymaintenance1585
    @sanitymaintenance1585 Před 2 lety +1

    The next time you build one put an upside down U or drip loop in after the valve of each stage . What you build works by gravity . So adding an upside down drip loop in will catch more water and it will double what you have now . So first stage valve then after that drip loop upside down going to stage 2 valve then going to upside down drip loop .Once your wet receiver is full of water (your tank) in super hot summer it will pay off . Winter is one thing but summer is a bit different .. Oh I will add this in as well . If you have 125 psi in your wet receiver (tank) and only using 30 psi at the other end ? Having a regulator before it hits the part that you built will help a lot . So your tank 125 psi and a regulator 80 to 60 to what you made and after what you made regulator at 30 psi depending on your needs ??? Anytime you slow something down gravity takes over . good video !!

  • @stickbogart3657
    @stickbogart3657 Před rokem

    ❤❤ you’re a pay a lot more than that now for an air compressor. I’ve got the cobalt air compressor from Lowe’s which is a two-stage compressor one big piston, and one small piston and it works great. I have no complaints with my air compressor and my air pressure gauge is 6 inches from one side to the other side of the air pressure gauge that way I don’t have to go over directly to the air compressor to read the air pressure gauge and I have a secondary tank tapped into it so when it’s running, it’s actually filling two tanks, a 60 gallon and a 22 gallon air tank❤❤❤❤

  • @Jay_the_Caffeinator
    @Jay_the_Caffeinator Před rokem

    You could put some really thin metal sheet where the valves discharge. It will help stop pushing the moisture into your drywall.

  • @andreiv8186
    @andreiv8186 Před 2 lety +2

    Love this setup. Can you fit a transparent pipir down low so you can see the moisture when it builds up?

  • @takedeadaim8671
    @takedeadaim8671 Před rokem

    I realize it’s an old video but nice plan with the 1” copper. As others have said steel fittings in copper pipe and clamps are going to eventually cause an issue, the reducers and all are available in copper and a few feet of #10 copper wire would strap that down against two or three horizontal 2x4’s you get better air circulation behind the copper and eliminating the vibration saves the pipe.

    • @BecksArmory
      @BecksArmory  Před rokem

      Yeah i cover this and more in part 2. Since this video has blown up the last couple days I'm going to make a part 3 showing all my upgrades since I installed this. Here is a link to part 2 czcams.com/video/1eenVNNAHa8/video.html

    • @takedeadaim8671
      @takedeadaim8671 Před rokem

      @@BecksArmory I just watched Pt 2, nice job I’ll be watching for the update, I’ll be looking to build one later in spring when the humidity goes up and the snow goes away

  • @robert5
    @robert5 Před rokem

    I'm building one. I am going to use ether 3/8 or 1/2 tube and not that tall. I'm going to mount it on the compressor in front of the large compressor pulley with the slanted fins for air flow. I am going to connect it along the bottom to one long manifold with one dump valve. It will ether work or not lol. I am still going to mount a filter and desiccant dryer along with the regulator.
    There is one dude who used a older ford F250 air conditioner condenser mounted on the guard in front of his large finned pulley. Might do that is I can find one cheap enough. I just bought a plasma cutter so got to get this built.

  • @jeffbarker730
    @jeffbarker730 Před 3 lety +1

    Great job! May be a little over kill but look at results, good job sir!

  • @ouimetco
    @ouimetco Před rokem

    That table is sweet.

  • @maximusmurua4437
    @maximusmurua4437 Před 2 lety

    Thank you very much, really appreciate your help by sharing your experience

  • @kk2ak14
    @kk2ak14 Před 2 lety

    Very good idea man! Just connect another tank after the pipes.

  • @peterchang7646
    @peterchang7646 Před 3 lety +1

    Nice. My only comment is at about 5:50 of the video you talk about surface area of the 1" pipe as opposed to 1/4"... More air to copper contact on a smaller pipe than with a larger pipe... The ratio of air contact is higher - the smaller the pipe diameter is... That is why radiators, coolers tend to be made with smaller pipes than larger ones...

    • @BecksArmory
      @BecksArmory  Před 3 lety

      yes they use smaller pipe but they than have to have 10x linear feet of said pipe. I want to save space, slow the velocity, and get lots of surface area at the same time.

  • @sylvainmichelparadis8145
    @sylvainmichelparadis8145 Před 2 měsíci

    Great job

  • @lynnbevins7100
    @lynnbevins7100 Před rokem

    Running your dirt leg that way atomizes the water droplets thus moving down the line. Smoother flow= more condensing of water on walls= better efficiency

  • @carrollnorwood5133
    @carrollnorwood5133 Před rokem

    Again thank you

  • @butchs2337
    @butchs2337 Před 2 lety

    just want to thank you, it help us a lot

  • @eddiepadilla1078
    @eddiepadilla1078 Před rokem

    Velocity approaches zero the closer you get to the surface (think of dust on your windshield).

  • @AXNJXN1
    @AXNJXN1 Před rokem

    Smartly done! Love what you've done there!

  • @mjktrash
    @mjktrash Před rokem +1

    I bet someone covered this for you already, apologies if so
    1/4 tube = .25^2 * Pi = ~.05sqin
    1" tube = .5^2 * Pi = ~.785sqin
    That's a 16x factor, so good job!
    (And going from rubber hose to copper tube is another increasing factor)

    • @BecksArmory
      @BecksArmory  Před rokem +1

      In my head I was thinking it was 16x but I don't know if I was willing to say it in the video. hahaha. I hadn't done the math and I didn't want to spoil the video over this 1 issue. :) Thanks for the confirmation.

  • @crisestrada9964
    @crisestrada9964 Před rokem

    My Buddy made one out of 40 PVC for his Paint booth and it works

    • @BecksArmory
      @BecksArmory  Před rokem

      but it would work much better if it were copper. The explanation is in part 2.

  • @bobbg9041
    @bobbg9041 Před rokem

    3:38 real fact, and i worked in a machine shop so i know whats in the air of a shop,
    As well as worked with auto painters. You machine cut grind weld you put a lot of dust and smoke as well as oil in the air in your shop, the compressor should be outside the shop you can build an outdoor insulated compressor shed. Then pipe it back into the shop because all that stuff in the air gets into your compressor pumps eating the cylinder walls.

  • @canetiberius7050
    @canetiberius7050 Před rokem

    You could get an aftercooler to install on the back of the compressor and use the pump and motor wheel as fans to pull air through the aftercooler, the moisture will then condense into the bottom of the tank. Then drain the water weekly.

  • @michaelmusson3593
    @michaelmusson3593 Před rokem

    I did the same thing I probably spent 350 dollars on mine I used 3/4 tubing but the L tubing not the M the L is thinner and about half the price I remember checking how much pressure it would hold and it was around 400 lbs I used 8 7ft sections so gave me 42 feet for the air to cool.

    • @timothyholewinski2478
      @timothyholewinski2478 Před 8 měsíci

      I think you have this backwards. K is the thickest, M is the thinnest, L is in between, so L is THICKER than M and should cost more...

  • @kevinreed4731
    @kevinreed4731 Před 2 lety +1

    I wonder if you used sections of baseboard heat if the fins would help with cooling?

  • @MrTheHillfolk
    @MrTheHillfolk Před rokem

    I definitely need to build something like this.
    Im always on pops to drain the compressor but he doesnt.
    Campbell hausfeld 60 or 80 gallon(lol i always forget) single stage.
    Its in the heated part of the shop, but i usually work in the unheated area.
    This winter was so mild ,it was 38f for most of the time in the work area.
    Totally awesome to me ,as i work outside so that was almost t shirt weather to me 😂.
    Anyway,after 5-8mins my angle die grinder blows ice chunks and gets slower and slower, ao i stop and go drain the tank and put some oil in the tool and go another 10mins and repeat.
    I did stick a couple of engine heater magnets on it for 3-4 days with the drain opened and that helped quite a bit.
    Finally,i took about a shot glass worth of 91% isopropyl and dumped it in and thats been the best solution so far.
    Im tired 😂, i want something permanent like this (so i also saved the vid so whwn i finally get around ro it ill rewatch)
    Thanks man !
    Edit: I just had a brain flatulation!
    I've got an old craftsman compressor with a dead compressor,I wonder if it's worth putting that in the unheated shop area and running the line to that instead of running off the line ?
    Maybe it would help some of the moisture issue as it's like a big separator and accumulator.

    • @MrTheHillfolk
      @MrTheHillfolk Před rokem

      2:25 those look pretty sweet.
      As I've recently installed an air ride in a car ,with the supplied separator it's a little tiny thing that fits in your hand, I need one of these to add in on that 😂

  • @chipsmith7459
    @chipsmith7459 Před 10 měsíci

    Nice project. Even better would be to use Rasberry Pi on the valves and automate them. However... there is good enough!

  • @DougsMessyGarage
    @DougsMessyGarage Před 2 lety

    I have a CF-Pro on order. I think I might have to look at making one of these cooling rigs for my compressor

    • @BecksArmory
      @BecksArmory  Před 2 lety

      did you order a plasma cutter to go with it? If not check out my videos on the Everlast Power plasma 82i. I ran the Razorweld Razorcut 45 for a year then upgraded to the Everlast 82i I love it.

    • @DougsMessyGarage
      @DougsMessyGarage Před 2 lety

      @@BecksArmory I am gong to start with the Razorcut 45 if for no other reason than since it is the unit Langmuir sells, they will be able to provide support for it during the learning phase. If I find I need something better, I will upgrade. The Everlast is on my list of potential upgrades if the Razorcut 45 doesn't cut it.

    • @BecksArmory
      @BecksArmory  Před 2 lety

      @@DougsMessyGarage That what I did and for the same reason. :) buying a new CNC plasma table is stressful enough. Adding what seems like and un-supported devise on top of that is scary.

  • @alexk6745
    @alexk6745 Před 7 měsíci

    As other have said, this needs to be before compressor tank and recorded the temperature drop between the input and output.

  • @jeffreymeyers7514
    @jeffreymeyers7514 Před 3 lety +2

    Nice setup. I've got two 8 foot vertical runs of PVC. Valve 1 always has moisture. Valve 2 never has moisture that I can see but my system is for automotive which isn't as sensitive. Good for air tools and not pumping water into tires. Also use 45 angles to keep moisture off the wall.

    • @ddemier
      @ddemier Před 2 lety

      What inline seprator do you use? I do Automotive refinishing as well and need to do some vertical columns like this but I'm considering 1" steel

    • @James-zy8vk
      @James-zy8vk Před 2 lety +1

      I guess you havn't seen PVC explode, I have, not pretty, not to be trusted.

  • @joebob7344
    @joebob7344 Před 3 lety +3

    If you just barely crack the moisture drain on the bottom of your compressor just enough to hardly hear a small trickle of air the moisture will continuously drain out of the tank and never collect enough to pool at the bottom of the tank. Works great for me and I never have to drain the tank. You ca leave a dry sponge under the valve to collect and dispaiate the condensation.

  • @riftalope
    @riftalope Před rokem

    You can run vinyl tubing from the bottom of the valves to a single (ball) jar and see what amount of water you're keeping out of the lines. To affix the lines to a lid is tricky. I've seen hot glue on the outside of holes in the lid, and I've seen plumbing connectors inside the lid with larger holes. I prefer the later. But you must not screw the lid down firmly. You need that gap, and maybe a few nail holes, to let the air out.

  • @leegarcia81
    @leegarcia81 Před rokem

    Nice set up but have you considered taking the air directly from the compressor outlet and running that through your copper system first and before it enters the tank. That eay you can avoid water build up in the tank itself. Also I see you have 4 valves. I would have hard piped those all into 1 valve that can drain all runs at once. And the added dead space where the t is can serve as a reservoir too. You can even add clear hoses to the parts were you have the valves at and make those all meet up into one purge valve. Then you could visually see the liquid as it builds up in each chamber

    • @BecksArmory
      @BecksArmory  Před rokem

      yeah I made a follow-up video talking about these things. :)

  • @jakeshughart361
    @jakeshughart361 Před rokem

    Looks to be the time u buy all the parts to do this harbor freight sells a air cooling system

  • @time1800
    @time1800 Před rokem

    Find a scrap A/C unit and use the condenser coil cost is free just time making manifold tubes.

  • @DayClanTribe
    @DayClanTribe Před rokem

    nice little workshop!