before you swap the pop off valve (relief valve) for a higher one, verify the tank is rated to support the higher pressure. should be stamped on a tag on the tank.
ben
Second is an observation about your insulation. Your whole attic looks to be insulated but then you have 2 vents and I assume more vents on the other side of attic. Doesn't this deffeat the purpose of insulation? Or do you cover those vents in the winter? Also those vents should be above the flat area of the trusses and not sure if you do or not but there should be eave vents and foam baffles along the roof sheathing on the angle part of your trusses.
Update:
I woke up one night thinking "Hey, aren't you supposed to change the oil in air compressors?". I panicked realizing I've been using this thing since 2011 and had never changed the oil.
So today, I changed it. The old oil came out looking brand new. Whew.
I suppose if I used the compressor EVERY DAY a more frequent change interval would be required, but now that I've done it once, I'm pretty confident that every few years will be fine.
i think i have a fix for the vibration. but no solution (yet) for the heat. it will be used intermittently. any thoughts on the moisture release valve? i don't know if it will work or if it has to be installed and sit horizontally.
Joe
If you add a wye strainer that valve would work. It certainly is priced right. Look like this.
http://www.supplyhouse.com/Bluefin-WYET050-1-2-Bronze-Wye-Strainer-Lead-Free-Threaded
California Air work great for airbrushes. Pretty low cfm for most other tools. The industrial model is designed for 4000 hours. The regular ones are either 1000 or 3000 hours.
Depending on the compresser, it will reach up to 300 ° F at the tubing coming out of the head. How hot is your attic? My old house hit about 130°F in the attic. Hard on rubber hoses. Although they can be rebuilt, oilless compressors are basically disposable. Dont worry about the heat. Just drain the water from tank.
Not a lot of vibration on the CA models I have seen.
That aluminum line is a bit of overkill for a tiny compressor. Overkill can be OK for its own sake. I used to install PE-AL-PE in small vet clinics for oxygen. I plan to use PEX on my next garage.
Just a thought-most MRV are installed in a bung, why not plumb a copper line down the wall into a 90 degree elbow and screw your petcock to that. it would take care of your moisture prob. and give you a way to drain your tank.
I had a compressor stored/ran in a shipping container ... And had rubber/compressor hose run along the top. Hose dried out and cracked...and the fittings shot off twice. This was after 2 summers in the mild SF Bay Area. The container would get quite hot, but no where near 140.That strainer is a great idea. Thanks!
I’m in Texas so on a nice sunny day the attic can get in the 140s. I did not think about the impact the heat will have on the rubber hose.
Which is rather better for heat? Especially temps of roughly 140 degrees? PEX or PE-AL-PE?
Any photos/details on Alexa powering up and down of garage accessoriesI have completed "project dry air":
The HF air dryer came. It is clearly made of chinesium, but it works and is relatively quiet. If I have trouble with it you can be sure I'll share my angst here. But for now, all is good. Warning to those who buy this thing: It does NOT come with a power cord. I didn't notice that and thus the project was stalled while I sourced a suitable cord to use.
I went with the modern plastic 'snap in' air hose (via McMaster-carr). I have never really used this stuff before and it makes me a bit nervous, but I've seen enough threads where people use it to success that I went with it. I'm happy with the results.
I added a second outlet to the 120V relay output. To remind everyone, a key feature of my setup is the air compressor system is only on when I'm actually using the garage. It's tied into my smart home system such that it's powered up whenever the garage is in "occupied mode". When I tell Alexa to close up the garage ("Alexa, turn off upper garage all") the lights go out, the music stops playing, all doors close, and the air compressor turns off.
I can also manually turn on and off the compressor power with "Alexa, turn on/off the air compressor". Of course I can do all of this with touch commands on the phone or touchscreen too.
There are two relays involved. One is on the 240V circuit; this powers the compressor itself. The other is on a 120V circuit and it used to just power the automatic tank drain. The second outlet on this relay now also powers the air dryer, so it is only on when the compressor is live.
Finished project:
It is really great having all this stuff out the the way (and quiet) in the attic.
No photos, but here's how it worked at 2100 (the OG "Bald is Beautiful" shop):Any photos/details on Alexa powering up and down of garage accessories
