niferous
Well-known member
I've got a large air compressor and I've got an idea for a tank drain that I wanted to post about before I started construction on it. Right now their is a normal drain on the bottom on the tank but I have the air compressor mounted in a little sound enclosure shed behind my garage and I don't want to have to walk around back all the time to drain it. I also don't want to set-up an auto drain as I have neighbors that will get nosy as to what the loud hiss they hear every so often is. My HOA is pretty laid back but I have one neighbor I could see throwing a fit over it. So I'm trying to devise a way to drain it, manually, from inside my garage.
My idea was to run a little 1/4" line from the bottom of the tank and follow the 3/4" air line I already have setup into my garage. From their I'd plumb it in to a little clear sight glass set up I have hanging around from a past project. I went online to the manufactures website and the sight glass and valves are rated for 250 psi, so no worries on pressure causing a leak. Basically I'd leave the inlet valve on the sight glass open and the outlet closed so I could see water accumulate. Either before I start to use the air or when I see the water level reach a certain level, I'd open the outlet valve and let the water drain out. As for an exit port I'd probably just use some more 1/4" line I have and run it somewhere that my neighbors won't hear hissing away.
I've got all the material I need so the price of the two gauge *****, sight glass, 1/4" line, etc isn't a factor. In fact the sight glass setup is about ten years old so I'd like to finally use it for something.
My concern is that pushing the water through the drain port, than about four feet up the wall of my shed, and finally into the sight glass could possibly cause my tank to not properly drain. I was thinking the easiest thing to do would be to put a 1/4" check valve right after the elbow coming out of the drain port so that water can flow out, but not in. Hopefully I'm just overthinking this whole thing but it doesn't hurt to ask before I go and start drilling holes in walls and running lines. Quick drawing attached.
Thanks in advance for any advice.
My idea was to run a little 1/4" line from the bottom of the tank and follow the 3/4" air line I already have setup into my garage. From their I'd plumb it in to a little clear sight glass set up I have hanging around from a past project. I went online to the manufactures website and the sight glass and valves are rated for 250 psi, so no worries on pressure causing a leak. Basically I'd leave the inlet valve on the sight glass open and the outlet closed so I could see water accumulate. Either before I start to use the air or when I see the water level reach a certain level, I'd open the outlet valve and let the water drain out. As for an exit port I'd probably just use some more 1/4" line I have and run it somewhere that my neighbors won't hear hissing away.
I've got all the material I need so the price of the two gauge *****, sight glass, 1/4" line, etc isn't a factor. In fact the sight glass setup is about ten years old so I'd like to finally use it for something.
My concern is that pushing the water through the drain port, than about four feet up the wall of my shed, and finally into the sight glass could possibly cause my tank to not properly drain. I was thinking the easiest thing to do would be to put a 1/4" check valve right after the elbow coming out of the drain port so that water can flow out, but not in. Hopefully I'm just overthinking this whole thing but it doesn't hurt to ask before I go and start drilling holes in walls and running lines. Quick drawing attached.
Thanks in advance for any advice.
