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#2
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Re: A tube burst-What happened?
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#3
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Re: A tube burst-What happened?
Same thing happened to a team at Midwest last year. The team had been checking for a problem leak and couldn't find it. They had the compressor running continuous for about 15-20 minutes. When the tubing let go it was like a firecracker.
I have to ask, it looks like your compressor is discolored. Is it covered in something? Did it get contaminated? |
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#4
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Re: A tube burst-What happened?
If you are going to run the compressor for long duty cycles, especially out in the heat, maybe you should put a length of copper tubing, preferably with cooling fins, out of the compressor for a couple of feet.
Because of PV=nRT the gas is coming out very hot and directly hitting the tubing. I would bet in commercial applications the air is already cooled before it is distributed around a plant and delivered to systems using the flex tubing. In commercial plants that has to deliver a lot of air they may even push the air through a heat exchanger to cool the gas before storage and delivery. If you have a shop air compressor you can, but SHOULD NOT touch, the copper tube from the compressor head to the storage tank. After it runs is is very hot, and if you touch it may burn your hand. The air in the tank now has a new set of dynamics and moisture will condense, rain, into the bottom of the tank. That is why there is a valve on the bottom of the tank, so you can drain the condensate, but I digress. PV=nRT |
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#5
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Re: A tube burst-What happened?
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Just received a new scene shop compressor that will be used for tools in building sets. It is a two stage compressor where the output of one piston enters a second piston. That pipe is finned and passes in front a fan that also passes air through the output heat exchanger. I have been asked several questions about "radiator" on the new compressor. |
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#6
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Re: A tube burst-What happened?
Our 100 HP plant air compressor discharge is 190 F @ 100ish psi. It goes thru an air to air cooler & is about 120F before the dryer. Discharge of the dryer is about 90F. It goes into a steel storage tank. By the time it gets to the process it is more or less ambient. The expansion acts in the other direction & cools it.
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