American Woodworker
Contact Us | Help | Report a Bug
Sign in | Join
 

Plumb Your Shop with Air Panama City FL

Every article I read on plumbing air lines advised using either iron or copper. Because my basement shop holds a lot of obstructions, using iron or copper would result in a whole lot of threading or soldering of short little pieces. Besides, copper and iron fittings are costly.

The Home Depot
(850)913-8860
409 23rd St East
Panama City, FL
Panama City Mall
(850) 872-2211
733 N Highway 231
Panama City, FL
LOWE'S OF PANAMA CITY, FLA.
850 913-1600
300 EAST 23RD ST. PANAMA CITY, FL, 32405
Panama City, FL
Kmart 3355 / Cross Merch
(850) 769-2251
1329 W 15Th St
Panama City, FL
Lowe's
(850) 913-1600
300 East 23Rd Street
Panama City, FL
The Home Depot
(850)234-2018
11500 Panama City Bch Pk
Panama City, FL
Bay Brokers & Distributors Inc
850-785-1205
2210 West 23rd St Panama City, FL, 32405
Panama City, FL
The Home Depot
(850)913-8860
409 23rd St East
Panama City, FL
Fastenal- Panama City
850-747-0089
1209 Harrison Ave Panama City, FL, 32401
Panama City, FL
Southern Fastening Systems- Panama City Beach
850-235-3035
7512-B McElvey Panama City Beach, FL, 32408
Panama City Beach, FL

Plumb Your Shop with Air

Plumb Your Shop With AIr

Flexible Hose Saves Time and Money

by Richard Tendick

Moments after I tripped over the air hose and dropped an armload of boards, I decided it was time to plumb my shop for air.  I was tired of having 50 ft. of hose on the floor and dashing back to the compressor to adjust the line pressure. I knew a permanent system could deliver the right amount of air where and when I needed it—without a big hose snaked dangerously across the floor. 

Every article I read on plumbing air lines advised using either iron or copper.  Because my basement shop holds a lot of obstructions, using iron or copper would result in a whole lot of threading or soldering of short little pieces. Besides, copper and iron fittings are costly. 

Ultimately, I decided on a solution I had used many times in my 27 years as a manufacturing plant engineer. When installing printing presses and other large machines, I used rubber air hose as a flexible pipe to route compressed air in and through the equipment without having to do a lot of complicated plumbing.

That approach would certainly work with all the obstructions in my shop. I chose a rubber hose rated for 250 pounds per square inch (psi), plenty for my little pancake compressor. The 1/2-in. inside diameter meant no reduction in air pressure would occur along the length of the run.

(Click Image to Expand)


(Click Image to Expand)

This story originally appeared in  American Woodworker September 2006, issue #123.

Source information may have changed since the original publication date.

Source  

MSC Industrial Supply, (800) 645-7270, www.mscdirect.com

September 2006, issue #123

Purchase this back issue.

Click here to read the rest of the article from American Woodworker