I was thinking about what a few of you suggested about my having a drop leg or legs on my lines. Maybe I need to post more pics or make a diagram, because I got to thinking:
that even if I switched the T's on my lines so that there was a drop leg where the drop/filter/regulator/coupler/hose is now, and switched that assembly over to a capped off T - and even if I interspersed even a few drop legs here or there, I don't see why the moisture is going to necessarily collect in the drop leg.
What's to prevent it from just collecting in the path of the assembly at the T rather than at a drop leg. I don't think that gravity has anything to do with it; and it seems to me to be irrelevant if the moisture is in the air, because compressed air wouldn't discriminate, and lastly, even if when the moisture is condensed in the lines after, say, I turn off the compressor for 7 hours before turning it back on for 16-17 hours at a time, what's to prevent from not taking advantage of a drip leg?
I'm just trying to picture how this would work - - and I think if I could actually make a decent drawing of this thing in different views - - you all might see where I'm coming from.
