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Air lines to a Bendpak four post lift

gygeneral

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Dec 13, 2011
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167
Location
Ontario, Canada
I am planning on running a line to my lift. The manual says I need a lubricator in line. I don't have any lubricators in my shop as of yet. How are you guys running this line to your lift. Are you installing a regulator,filter and lubricator on the lift post? Are you regulating your pressure down? Again per the instruction manual, I would have to install all three on the left post. That is quite the amount of equipment on there.

Let see what you have have done. Thanks
 
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911mike

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May 22, 2010
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494
Location
michigan
I ran a regulator/lubricator combo on the post that the pump is mounted on. There was a bracket on the post that I just made work. I run 150 PSI on the entire building and regulate at each drop or device. For the life I run 100 PSI. I run a rolling jack on this same line without any problems at all. Getting ready to buy another rolling jack and will plumb both into the same line.
 
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gygeneral

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Dec 13, 2011
Messages
167
Location
Ontario, Canada
Thanks, I figured there wasn't enough real estate on the post to fit it all , I guess I should look for one that is small enough to fit.
 

koditten

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Apr 10, 2008
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Location
Midland, Michigan
I'm from the school that oilers are over rated.

I have never ran an air line oiler in 25 years. My impact tools run just fine with a shot of penetrating oil directly in the quick connect. If I oil the air tools 3x per year, I would be suprised.

Secondly, I do occasional painting. I do not want any oil residue in the air lines supplying the paint sprayer.

If I was runnig a 3/4" impact wrench for dedicated truck service, I might consider installing one, otherwise, just not really needed.
 

peryan

Member
Joined
Jan 12, 2014
Messages
15
Location
chicago
I have a bendpak hd7w that I installed two years ago. I ran an air line straight off the compressor without any oilers. It works flawlessly. I love not having to connect an air line every time I lower it. I use the lift several time per week.
 

WhiffySpark

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Oct 22, 2009
Messages
6,252
I'm from the school that oilers are over rated.

I have never ran an air line oiler in 25 years. My impact tools run just fine with a shot of penetrating oil directly in the quick connect. If I oil the air tools 3x per year, I would be suprised.

Secondly, I do occasional painting. I do not want any oil residue in the air lines supplying the paint sprayer.

If I was runnig a 3/4" impact wrench for dedicated truck service, I might consider installing one, otherwise, just not really needed.

We have them installed on all the 4 posts. I've yet to see someone put oil in them lol
 

tdkkart

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Jun 17, 2006
Messages
6,887
Location
Eastern Iowa
I have never ran an air line oiler in 25 years. My impact tools run just fine with a shot of penetrating oil directly in the quick connect. If I oil the air tools 3x per year, I would be suprised.


We had some old 1/2 sheet sanders at work that had been run probably at least 100's, if not thousands of hours with never a drop of oil.
Bought a new IR because the operators thought the old ones were clunky and junk.

New IR would run about an hour before it locked up. Oil it, wiggle it loose and an hour later it was locked up again.

Operator wanted her old sander back anyway because it ran smoother....
 

c39er

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Joined
Mar 23, 2008
Messages
1,667
Location
Seattle, Washington
My air supply setup with oiler-to keep BP's warranty--just in case you know!
I have two RJ7 jacks on this lift.
 

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wssix99

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Mar 2, 2011
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5,162
Location
Chicago, IL
For occasional use, I've always been interested in BendPak's Air Bottle accessory, which eliminates the need for direct air plumbing: http://www.bendpak.com/car-lifts/accessories/compressed-air-bottle.aspx

It looks to me like it uses bleed air from the hydraulic system to charge the air bottle? I assume this is how the air stays oily and an oiling system is not needed for this self-contained option.
 
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mhm993

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Jan 13, 2008
Messages
516
I'm in the "occassional squirt of oil out of the bottle camp into the fitting" camp. Probably should squirt more often........:willy_nil
 

Bib Overalls

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Joined
Dec 4, 2006
Messages
3,318
Location
Jonesboro, Arkansas
If you bring air down from the ceiling you might also consider an electric drop as well. You can screw a couple of suitable outdoor type junction boxes to a post and have close power for a welder, drop light, corded drill, etc. I've seen that in pro shops and they seem to get a lot of use.
 
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gygeneral

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Joined
Dec 13, 2011
Messages
167
Location
Ontario, Canada
If you bring air down from the ceiling you might also consider an electric drop as well. You can screw a couple of suitable outdoor type junction boxes to a post and have close power for a welder, drop light, corded drill, etc. I've seen that in pro shops and they seem to get a lot of use.
Yep I have an electrical drop already. Its very useful. You can see it in the picture.
 

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wssix99

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Mar 2, 2011
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5,162
Location
Chicago, IL
?? "mini split" please explain

It looks like you have a mini split air conditioning system installed up high on the wall?

My garage is heated and if the concrete walls don't keep it cool enough in the summer, I'm thinking of installing one.
 
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gygeneral

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Joined
Dec 13, 2011
Messages
167
Location
Ontario, Canada
It looks like you have a mini split air conditioning system installed up high on the wall?

My garage is heated and if the concrete walls don't keep it cool enough in the summer, I'm thinking of installing one.

Sorry I didn't know the technical name for that unit. A friend who is in that business installed it a few years back. It does a good job in my garage but my garage is also only 20X28. I hate the heat, so its nice in the summer to be able to go in the garage and work without sweating. Also the unit is very quiet.
 
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