2ndGearRubber
Well-known member
I developed a leak in a hose whip feeding one of my 498 air hammers last week. The tool had ~18" of continental hose with push-lock air fittings for 1/4npt. The leak appears to be between the hose and the fitting, the fitting going into the gun, probably due to extreme vibration.
Anyways I picked up a quick replacement on Amazon, which unfortunately has a ball swivel on it so that end probably shouldn't get screwed into the air hammer. Which got me thinking, what makes for the ideal lead-in/whip hose? Are push-lock fittings inherently less reliable than crimps? Perhaps I could buy replacement push-locks and just cut my old hose down a bit?
What defines "ideal" for lead/whip hoses on high power percussion tools like impacts or air hammers?
Anyways I picked up a quick replacement on Amazon, which unfortunately has a ball swivel on it so that end probably shouldn't get screwed into the air hammer. Which got me thinking, what makes for the ideal lead-in/whip hose? Are push-lock fittings inherently less reliable than crimps? Perhaps I could buy replacement push-locks and just cut my old hose down a bit?
What defines "ideal" for lead/whip hoses on high power percussion tools like impacts or air hammers?