To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

3/4" filter/separator/filter

sbarton

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 6, 2008
Messages
87
Location
NJ
3/4" filter/separator/regulator

Loooking for a cheap but good 3/4" filter, water separator, and regulator. Links please.

Also do these need to be installed horizontally or can they be installed on a vertical run?


-Scott
 
Last edited:
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

bmwpower

Super Moderator
Staff member
Joined
Apr 24, 2005
Messages
12,578
Location
NJ
How cheap?

The bowl needs to be facing down so filtered material can be expelled out the bleeder. You'd have to use 90 degree elbows if you wanted to mount it inline on a verticle run.
 

ironroad 9c1

Banned
Joined
Sep 3, 2005
Messages
758
Location
Gum spring,VA
don't buy the northern tool ones, they are junk. My regulator sticks all the time and i have to take the top off and unstick the valve. I should have just spent the money and bought a Milton setup.
 

buening

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 17, 2007
Messages
1,338
Location
Decatur, IL
I love my Norgren filter/regulator combos in my system, which appears to be the same as the above SpeedAire from Grainger. Here is the one similar to mine, except I found mine on ebay for about $20 each. http://www.grainger.com/Grainger/items/4ZK98?Pid=search

Took me a few months before I found them though. There are plenty in the 3/8" and 1/2" NPT but not too many of the larger 3/4"
 

aczr2k

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 24, 2007
Messages
523
Location
NW Minnesota
Yep check ebay, I picked up a new Norgren 3/4" filter/regulator for around $45, normally around $110.
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!
OP
S

sbarton

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 6, 2008
Messages
87
Location
NJ
I haven't found any 3/4" water separators. Most filters I see, look similar to TP tools water separator. Are they the same thing, just called different names, or is a separator different from the filter?

TP Tools water separator
3403-34-water-separator.jpg



Parker Air filter
!BUmjm(gBGk~$(KGrHgoOKjEEjlLm(s8hBKOUiZs8n!~~_12.JPG


Is Parker good?

-Scott


-Scott
 

Charles (in GA)

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 11, 2006
Messages
12,489
Location
50 mi south of Atlanta
Typically the filter or water separator are the same thing. It has a drain on the bottom, uses a swirling action to separate the water, and has a real fine screen, usually nylon mesh, to "filter" the air. If you are spray painting, you will need a much better inline filter near the spray gun, one that uses some sort of synthetic or paper filter element to stop virtually everything but the air itself. However, for filtering the air before it goes into the pipes and hoses for use by blow nozzles, impacts, etc, the mesh screen is just fine.

Charles
 

1320stang

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 28, 2006
Messages
4,588
Location
Edmond, OK
I bought mine on eBay, look for Norgren, Parker, Speedaire, Watts or Wilkerson. All are quality pieces.
 
OP
S

sbarton

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 6, 2008
Messages
87
Location
NJ
Thanks Charles. So just a filter and regulator will be fine. When you see a line of the devices, filter, regulator, separator. Is it a general filter, regulator, and coalescing filter?

-Scott
 
OP
S

sbarton

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 6, 2008
Messages
87
Location
NJ
Also, the filters I have found have a poly bowl and a rating to 150psi. The outlet on my compressor is 180 psi. Should I just put the filter after the regulator, or should the filter be before the regulator?

!BUmjm(gBGk~$(KGrHgoOKjEEjlLm(s8hBKOUiZs8n!~~_12.JPG


-Scott
 

Vinko

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 7, 2008
Messages
5,829
Location
Los Angeles
re. above:

I've got Parker Watt's brand of filter/regulator and it also performs the function of water separator. They are the "mini" series. I went from main 3/4 pipe to the drop where I went 1/4" ****** to Parker then 1/4" ******, then 3/8ths ID hose with 1/4" fittings.

I did this at four drops and they work really good.
 

mrjsl

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 22, 2009
Messages
74
Location
Louisiana
To answer some of your questions...

Parker offers a lot of lines and a lot of products, but at the top end, they are pretty much the world leader in compressed air filtration. At the top end they are also incredibly expensive. Over the years they have bought many competitors, and they have the most R&D going on. Many competitors just use technology that Parker developed or bought.

Coalescing filters are water separators. Coalescing is a method of removing water from air (or any fluid lighter than water) by forcing water particles to collide, form larger particles and ultimately drop out of the air stream. In filtration, the term coalescing always refers to a means of removing water by mechanical means - i.e. not the filter element. Any filter will stop some water, but coalescing filters usually add some sort of baffle which causes water to spin and reverse direction before passing through the filter element.

If you are going to run filters in sequence, you should run the coalescing one first and a good particulate filter after. Removing water from air and removing particulate from air are two different things, and where it really counts you always see two different filters to handle two different jobs. If you don't need things to be super clean, then a combo unit will do a fine job. By super clean I mean like a hospital.

If you are going to run a regulator, but it ahead of the filter. Any filtration is simple stuff at a low rate of flow, but at high flow rates, it can be much more difficult to accomplish. In compressed air filtration, high rates of flow are the norm, so anything you do to slow it down, do it before the filter so the filter can do it's job more efficiently.
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!
Top Bottom