Aviatordave
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jul 24, 2015
- Messages
- 58
Hey Guys,
I’m plumbing in an auto drain for my shop compressor. (80 gallon, 5hp)
I’ve got a solenoid valve that I’ll be hooking to a timer. Planning on having it cycle once a night in the wee hours so it doesn’t startle the heck out of me when it runs.
Originally I was going to just drill a hole in the side of the barn and blow it outside. Call me **** retentive but the thought of drilling a hole in the wall has been causing me some mild indigestion.
So I thought about discharging it into a bucket that would sit next to the compressor. Lid on the bucket, some vent holes so the bucket didn’t try to explode every time. Wondering if a chronically damp bucket would promote mold growth.
Then an idea hit me. I have an old pressure regulator with a water separator laying around. It’s an auto drain model with a sight glass on the front. Is there any good reason I couldn’t just mount that on a wall next to the compressor, plumb the discharge line into that and let it deal with the water? That’s what its purpose in life is . . . right? Maybe put a drain tube from that down into a bucket if I felt so inclined but I suspect it wouldn’t be necessary. (It never seemed necessary when it was in use earlier in its life on the main air line out to the shop, but we are talking about the drain now . . . We’re not talking about a lot of water each day . . .)
Am I being stupid here? Is there some glaringly obvious thing I’m overlooking that the instant one of you brings it up I’m going to smack my forehead and regret having even posted the question?
This seems like a reasonable solution to me . . .
FWIW, I’m gonna just run a 1/2” pex line out of the solenoid valve to whatever solution I go with. (Heavily leaning towards this regulator/water separator idea.) The pressure regulator will just have the exhaust end open. There won’t be any appreciable build up pressure downstream from the solenoid valve to inflate the pex. I’d mount this on the wall right over the bucket. (Photos attached)
What are your thoughts? Is this a good or bad idea?
-Dave
I’m plumbing in an auto drain for my shop compressor. (80 gallon, 5hp)
I’ve got a solenoid valve that I’ll be hooking to a timer. Planning on having it cycle once a night in the wee hours so it doesn’t startle the heck out of me when it runs.
Originally I was going to just drill a hole in the side of the barn and blow it outside. Call me **** retentive but the thought of drilling a hole in the wall has been causing me some mild indigestion.
So I thought about discharging it into a bucket that would sit next to the compressor. Lid on the bucket, some vent holes so the bucket didn’t try to explode every time. Wondering if a chronically damp bucket would promote mold growth.
Then an idea hit me. I have an old pressure regulator with a water separator laying around. It’s an auto drain model with a sight glass on the front. Is there any good reason I couldn’t just mount that on a wall next to the compressor, plumb the discharge line into that and let it deal with the water? That’s what its purpose in life is . . . right? Maybe put a drain tube from that down into a bucket if I felt so inclined but I suspect it wouldn’t be necessary. (It never seemed necessary when it was in use earlier in its life on the main air line out to the shop, but we are talking about the drain now . . . We’re not talking about a lot of water each day . . .)
Am I being stupid here? Is there some glaringly obvious thing I’m overlooking that the instant one of you brings it up I’m going to smack my forehead and regret having even posted the question?
This seems like a reasonable solution to me . . .
FWIW, I’m gonna just run a 1/2” pex line out of the solenoid valve to whatever solution I go with. (Heavily leaning towards this regulator/water separator idea.) The pressure regulator will just have the exhaust end open. There won’t be any appreciable build up pressure downstream from the solenoid valve to inflate the pex. I’d mount this on the wall right over the bucket. (Photos attached)
What are your thoughts? Is this a good or bad idea?
-Dave




