AN AUTO DRAINING WATER SEPARATOR FOR THE STACK…
Now that I have seen roughly how much water the STACK aftercooler pulls out of the air, I decided an auto drain on the upstream water separator was a must. I tried my other auto float drain there (with a simple bowl swap) and the float just got hammered from the pulsations in the pump outlet line. It was LOUD and couldn’t be used as is.
Luckily, not only does this particular water separator have a float to drain when full, but it also has a drain at the bottom to purge the bowl when the pressure drops to zero. PERFECT! In this location, the unloader valve conveniently drops the pump-to-tank line down to zero pressure every time the tank reaches its max setting (shutoff setting).
Knowing this was going to work out, I found another water separator on ebay for $25 (plus $12 shipping) and it came with a bonus 1/2” regulator. I will swipe the auto drain bowl from this new one and use it to replace the simple manual drain metal bowl shown earlier in the video.

My quick solution involved just securing the float so it couldn’t rattle in there, in effect, overriding the float feature. A spring did a fine job at holding the float in a down position.

Here’s a look down into the bowl.

And here it is assembled.

A little water spits out after every 95-125psi pump cycle. I will connect a hose to the bowl and collect it down in a larger reservoir.
Here is a cross section for reference. The extra spring sits on top of the float, item 2.
Now that I have seen roughly how much water the STACK aftercooler pulls out of the air, I decided an auto drain on the upstream water separator was a must. I tried my other auto float drain there (with a simple bowl swap) and the float just got hammered from the pulsations in the pump outlet line. It was LOUD and couldn’t be used as is.
Luckily, not only does this particular water separator have a float to drain when full, but it also has a drain at the bottom to purge the bowl when the pressure drops to zero. PERFECT! In this location, the unloader valve conveniently drops the pump-to-tank line down to zero pressure every time the tank reaches its max setting (shutoff setting).
Knowing this was going to work out, I found another water separator on ebay for $25 (plus $12 shipping) and it came with a bonus 1/2” regulator. I will swipe the auto drain bowl from this new one and use it to replace the simple manual drain metal bowl shown earlier in the video.

My quick solution involved just securing the float so it couldn’t rattle in there, in effect, overriding the float feature. A spring did a fine job at holding the float in a down position.

Here’s a look down into the bowl.

And here it is assembled.

A little water spits out after every 95-125psi pump cycle. I will connect a hose to the bowl and collect it down in a larger reservoir.
Here is a cross section for reference. The extra spring sits on top of the float, item 2.
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(Who wants a 4 cylinder 2-stroke engine quieted down anyway! 






























Yeah, Right...









. Give me another month or two until the main feed doesn't get disconnected when I'm away for a week. I think it took about 2 months before I stopped worrying about the front control panel (light panel) starting the place on fire. 









