My 60 gallon upright runs my plasma cutter flawlessly without a filter to be seen.
But my setup is rather more involved than most. There’s a post on it here on GJ from 5+ years ago, somewhere.
Compressor head discharges 250+ degree air.
It’s plumbed into a transmission cooler, which spits the cooled air into a compact franzinator (google that) made out of galvanized pipe. After that, the air is fed to the 60 gallon tank.
Even on a 103 degree day with 85 percent humidity here in the South, I’ve never seen a single drop of water at my tank drain. It’s all in the franzinator.
Hot air cannot have the water removed any way except for a dessicant filter. Why? Because the water is still a GAS. Cool the air down and it will condense into water droplets, which is why a coke can sweats when placed outside on a hot day. Now they water is easy to pull out of your plumbing with a simple trap or the like.
Traditional compressors have all kinds of water in the tank because that’s where it cools. Dump 250* air into the tank and let it cool down? You end up with water in the bottom of the tank.
Run your airtools hard and heat the whole thing up? You’ll end up with water in the hose because it didnt sit in the tank long enough to condense out... that happened in your airhose.
With my setup, I’ve run my plasma off a rubber hose plumbed difectly into the tank without any problems. Because the air is actually dry.
If you can plumb your shop with even a short 20 foot run of 2.0-3.0” gas pipe between the compressor and the rest of your plumbing, you’ll notice a huge decrease in moisture because that steel pipe is radiating heat and the larger diameter means the air sits in it for a while. (Make sure you slope this pipe downhill toward a drain.)