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Hand pump for hydrotest

KenMathisHD

Member
Joined
Feb 25, 2019
Messages
20
Location
Bulverde, Tx
Hi guys, I tried to test my air tank today without much success. I watched a video where a dude tested his using a grease gun filled with water, so I went out, bought a hand pump grease gun, put everything together, filled the tank and cylinder with water, but couldn’t get water to actually enter the tank from the gun through the grease gun. I tried different fittings and a different ends to the grease gun, though I’m not sure if I’m just doing it wrong or got screwed with a busted gun. I’ve seen folks say just use a small water hand pump, but what I find when I search is hand pumps for wells like you’d see on top of an old underground cistern. Is this actually what they’re using, or are they meaning something like a siphon pump? Any of y’all have a specific pump you like to use for doing this?


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Packard V8

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Mar 16, 2009
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7,380
Location
Spokane, WA
Rather than trying to use a zerk fitting, I remove the end from the hose and screw the pump hose directly into a correctly drilled and tapped pipe plug in order to seal the tank and introduce the fluid being pumped. It's possible to use a grease gun with only a hard line out, but just not as convenient.

Then, the tank must be completely filled with water and all air expelled. If there's even a small amount of air, the test isn't going to be accurate.

A good quality grease gun will pump water as well as it will grease. If it's worn or if it's a cheap Chicom, sometimes it won't. In that event, grease will be necessary. Depending on what variety of grease is used, it's going in in small shots and will form globules in the water which will float out when drained.

jack vines
 
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KenMathisHD

Member
Joined
Feb 25, 2019
Messages
20
Location
Bulverde, Tx
It was a cheapo Lucas mini grease gun. I’ve got a different one that works off my other air compressor but it wouldn’t hold water so I didn’t use it at the time. I’ll ditch the zerk, get some grease and see if I can get an adapter that goes from the end of the hose to the 1/4 opening I have


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theoldwizard1

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Feb 22, 2011
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43,243
Location
SE MI
Also, on another note, what should I do to keep the inside of the tank from rusting once all of the water is drained out? Just close it up and put a bit of pressure in it?

You live in TX. Pick a sunny, hot, low humidity day and leave it out in the sun with all of the valves open. By 4 or 5 PM that tank should be well over 100F !
 

Bondo

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Joined
Dec 22, 2007
Messages
2,550
Location
Greenfield, Maine
Hi guys, I tried to test my air tank today without much success.

Ayuh,..... I admit I'm somewhat easy to confuse, but this thread takes the cake,....

When I hydrostatically tested my homemade outdoor wood boiler, that I designed to run at system pressure, rather than open with a heat exchanger,....
I tested it pretty much how scuba tanks are tested,....

Fill it as full as possible with water,.... Then put the air pressure to it,.....

For air to be explosive, it takes a volume of air,....
For a test, yer talkin' an once or less of volume, so no explosion hazard,....

With my boiler, with the workin' pressure of 30 psi or less, I filled it with water, 'n put 90 psi of air to a fitting at the top.
2 days later, it was still at pressure with no leaks,.....

It's still workin' now, 14 years later,....
 

Sleeper

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Joined
Feb 27, 2009
Messages
73
Never done the hydro test myself but I have read that if you use a grease gun with water you have to reverse the plunger so it will seal properly with water. Might be different on different grease guns but the one I read about was designed so the different sides of the plunger sealed differently for grease and water.
 

LS6 Tommy

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Joined
Dec 27, 2013
Messages
26,162
Location
Northern NJ
Ayuh,..... I admit I'm somewhat easy to confuse, but this thread takes the cake,....

When I hydrostatically tested my homemade outdoor wood boiler, that I designed to run at system pressure, rather than open with a heat exchanger,....
I tested it pretty much how scuba tanks are tested,....

Fill it as full as possible with water,.... Then put the air pressure to it,.....

For air to be explosive, it takes a volume of air,....
For a test, yer talkin' an once or less of volume, so no explosion hazard,....

Bondo, no disrespect intended, but that is not how any pressure vessel is properly hydrotested. There is zero compressed air or gas of any kind involved. Any volume of compressed gas can be explosive, regardless of how small. :thumbup:

Tommy
 

L.Cheapo

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Joined
Oct 23, 2014
Messages
5,989
Keith Rucker just posted a hydro testing video today, he used a pressure washer. Just an idea.
 

tunerwithkids

Active member
Joined
Jul 29, 2020
Messages
33
Location
FL
I just followed Keith’s video and did my pressure test. I left all my valves in place since I just freshly installed everything before I learned so easy it was. The check valve held up to 270psi for 8 hrs. Here’s my DIY.
 

wrenchguy

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Joined
Sep 22, 2011
Messages
4,698
Location
NW Indiana
IT"S BS you have a 500psi pop off. It's wrong, maybe you misspoke! What does the manufacturer tag read regarding its original psi test? This video is not good.

I miss heard 500, 300 is more like it. But it might be better that your popoff is 25 psi more than what your gonna set the max pressure at. Be extremely sure of your narration and testing.
 
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