OP
gearhead9056
Well-known member
No I haven't tested it, I guess I haven't even thought about it
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You guys are starting to over think this a bit, there was no fiery explosion and no signs of one anywhere if I missed watching it, no smoke either. Its as simple as it did get rusted to much, no welds blew they are all intact. Then some the switch and relief failed and it blew.
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I don't know, yours was black inside and the one in the linked video was rust colored.
I'm wondering about Glyptal.does anyone know why nobody has any type of coatings inside their tanks to prevent rust and hopefully prevent these types of things from happening?
Crazy that the osha report concluded possibly wrong oil could cause one to explode..never would have thought that
... The guy I talked to said that they rarely see failures in the tanks except when they have been bolted down. He explained that when the tank is bolted rigidly to the floor the vibration of the motor weakens the welded seams. It seems to make sense but I’m not an engineer. ...
I heard nearly the same thing, just recently.
Gearhead, were there isolaters on the tanks's feet or was it rigid?
I would guess the wrong oil could end up going past the rings more than compressor oil, and when the vapors are under pressure they would become fairly combustible or something along those lines
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I doubt that your compressor oil would have made good diesel fuel.
Actually oil works quite well as diesel but in my previous post I just meant if it got hot enough/ over pressure/ exterior spark source kind of situation would be what OSHA would find to explode
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Actually oil works quite well as diesel but in my previous post I just meant if it got hot enough/ over pressure/ exterior spark source kind of situation would be what OSHA would find to explode
Sorry, I just don't see it as a plausible explanation.
I would guess the wrong oil could end up going past the rings more than compressor oil, and when the vapors are under pressure they would become fairly combustible or something along those lines

I don't really either, I was just thinking out loud about how OSHA could see its valid
Its possible a chain of events happened. I believe it was a case of over pressure but hard to believe that a pressure switch failed, a safety blow off failed, and tank failed all at same time.
If the scenario played out, the first two problems are failures, and the tank rupture is a result of those failures.
In a hypothetical, the pop-off could've been blocked/failed for a long time before the pressure switch failed so they're not simultaneous failures in the strictest meaning of the word.
I don't have much experience with compressors...but would an aluminum tank even though cost more work better and less prone to failure due to rust? I'm not sure if weld seam failure would help either material is used. Of course if other system failures as well...just wondering if aluminum tanks are any better?
I wouldn't recommend aluminum due to the fatigue properties... theoretically if you design a steel part right you can get an indefinite service life. Not true of aluminum...
A few other home compressor explosions can be seen here
I think I'd look into reporting this to the manufacturer and even look into reporting it to a state agency.
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