I will add to this: the only burned down compressor that I have owned was left on by mistake, had an airline valve failure, and even tho it was still running in the morning, was so hot that both the motor and compressor pump were shot.
I will add to this: the only burned down compressor that I have owned was left on by mistake, had an airline valve failure, and even tho it was still running in the morning, was so hot that both the motor and compressor pump were shot.
Gary Campbell
CNC Replacement & Upgrade Controllers
Custom 9012 Centroid ATC
Thanks Mark. Learning the manual coding is something I am working on.
One industrial compressor salesman said the weekend failure of a control is a test most eventually face and few of our light duty compressor's will survive a weekend running continuously. In some cases it leads to a bigger problem. I could not justify double the cost for an industrial grade machine, so I too am careful in this regard.
Agree'd. Like I say, this happened with a nearly brand new Quincy. Not a 100% duty screw but still a top of the line two stage, aftercooler, whole nine yards. My guess is it wouldnt have destroyed the compressor or burned the shop down but it'd likely have taken a lot of life out of the compressor. Thankfully it did happen on a Saturday during work. Sounded like an automatic machine gun going off in the compressor bay lol. My local compressor rep (bought there) was out Monday and diagnosed, patched us through til Tuesday when they came back and fixed it under warranty. I never forget to shut the compressor and drier down anymore lol.
Please help support the Creek.
"It's paradoxical that the idea of living a long life appeals to everyone, but the idea of getting old doesn't appeal to anyone."
Andy Rooney
FWIW...I've purchased three new metal cutting CNC machines over the years. None of them performed exactly to the advertised specs.
Without knowing anything about your CNC, I'd say 1500 ipm is pretty fast. Does your machine have servos or open loop steppers? If the stepper type you may be better off keeping it to the low speeds so as not to risk losing steps.
while ago we had talk about leaving air on in shop in this thread. well today went out in shop and heard compressor running. checked the drain valve off the like and man soon as touched the valve it became 2 pieces.. good thing was in shop to close main air line valve. the 2 stage 80 gallon compressor would of had work out...
Jerome, how big is the breaker on your compressor? I've always thought of relaying our compressor circuit but never looked to see how much a relay would cost. We have a shutdown routine (manual) to shutoff the dryer, auto condensate blow off, compressor, and main line ball valve off the tank. Its be cool to have that all done with the flip of a switch.
It is a 30 amp unit for my 5HP 80 gallon unit. I also have a solenoid to shut the air off at the tank both are on the same circuit.
I will have to do some looking around. Im guessing it may be cost prohibitive. We are feeding the compressor and accessories on a 100 amp sub. 80A for the compressor, 20 for the dryer and auto tank drain. I looked at solenoid valves a long while back and it seemed most were rated at 145PSI. Were running 175psi mains. Sounds like your setup is just what we were thinking. I suppose shutting it all down manually isnt that bad if the relay for 100A and solenoid would get spendy.
Thanks
Compressor is a 7.5HP Quincy MAX. Run amperage is 40A but Quincy spec's an 80A Breaker. The dryer is 15A and auto tank drain is less than an amp. That said, to meet spec we'd have to relay the whole lot which is why we just sent a dedicated 100A to the compressor bay.