cjhut
Electrical
- Nov 11, 2009
- 43
I am an electrical guy, so please bear with me. I work in a steel foundry in Pittsburgh, PA. It's freezing cold right now. The ambient temperature is getting down into the teens, even inside of the mill. The last 2 days we have had some downtime due to solenoids freezing up, both in the same area. When I pulled the valves, there was frost on the spools, probably from when the air expanded. Upstream of the valves I have a water separator, and separate oiler. I noticed that the separator was full of liquid water. I manually opened the drain and ran it out. The oiler had some oil in it. This 1/2" air line is in the low point of a main run, which is naturally why water is settling here. We have a refrigerated air dryer for our compressor system, which I know looses effectivness at these temperatures. We bought a new desecant dryer, but won't have it running for a while. My question is, are there any devices other than what we are using to place in line with the piping to eliminate water? And how effective are water separators in relation to our ambient temp. and dewpoint? And one more question, the water separator looks to be the auto draining type with a float. It seemed to be full, and I was wondering why it didn't drain automatically. There is a push lock fitting on the bottom for a drain hose. Do we have to have a hose pushed in for it to work?