Kevin C
Well-known member
The waste water from you compressor most likely will have some oil mixed in with it. Oil, water and oxygen will easily support mold and bacterial growth.
For fun, at work we took a sample of waste water from the compressor air lines and put it in agar in petri dishes. Within 24 hours we had a really nice colony of a yeast like growth. One of the biologists prepped a couple of slides, very interesting to see.
That was my cue to turn on the new dryer.
This is something I never really thought of. Wet air lines are a perfect breeding ground for all sorts of critters. That said, thing twice about blowing yourself off with compressed air or inhaling excessive amounts of compressed air. When you blow water out of your air line you are also spraying and aerosolizing what ever was growing in your air lines.
Compressor waste water is not a good thing in cuts.
A dryer will greatly cut down on organisms growing in your air lines. If the air from your compressor smells funny it might be from a biology experiment that running inside your tank and lines.
At the very least, make sure you keep your tank drained and avoid breathing water spray from your air lines.
Never hurts to be careful.
For fun, at work we took a sample of waste water from the compressor air lines and put it in agar in petri dishes. Within 24 hours we had a really nice colony of a yeast like growth. One of the biologists prepped a couple of slides, very interesting to see.
That was my cue to turn on the new dryer.
This is something I never really thought of. Wet air lines are a perfect breeding ground for all sorts of critters. That said, thing twice about blowing yourself off with compressed air or inhaling excessive amounts of compressed air. When you blow water out of your air line you are also spraying and aerosolizing what ever was growing in your air lines.
Compressor waste water is not a good thing in cuts.
A dryer will greatly cut down on organisms growing in your air lines. If the air from your compressor smells funny it might be from a biology experiment that running inside your tank and lines.
At the very least, make sure you keep your tank drained and avoid breathing water spray from your air lines.
Never hurts to be careful.

HOLY BIOLOGY BATMAN!!! Who'd a thunk it!! I just got an older 80 gal compressor from an auction, I've been trying to clean it up on the outside, plus running the pressure up and opening the drain and letting it rip Ralph!! I bet I've got yeast growing all over the place, I've got to keep my beer covered!! 