My PowerPlasma 50 has been one heck of a machine. Nice cuts and very reliable until I started cutting on very humid days. I also am planning on getting a CNC machine so I need dry air.
My air compressor was a Craftsman 33 gallon oilless. It was loud as all get out and drove me crazy. But it did give me enough air to run my PowerPlasma 50. Every time I used it the air compressor would kick on and it was so loud it woke the dead and made anyone alive jump. So I replaced the oilless pump head/motor with an old 3 hp Dayton 220 volt motor and for the pump, an Eaton V-twin belt drive oil bath pump. The 33 gallon tank was perfect and allows me to roll it around and not have miles of hose. Really quiet and NOW I have a real air compressor.
The problem started when I was plasma cutting on humid days. I do run a filter but the moisture was still a problem as I was not getting very good life out of my consumables. I did some research and found that water in the air is a real problem for plasma cutters. The dryer the air the better and dry air is needed for long consumables life and for smoother cuts.
So I did some more research and found that there are many ways to get water out of your air. I wanted to do something that required not a lot of money and not a lot of maintenance.
When you compress air, it heats up and that heat allows the air to hold more water. Compressing humid air concentrates the water in the air and then it condenses on the cool inside walls of the air tank. Sort of like taking a hot shower and the mirror in your bathroom gets all steamy. When the air in the tank is consumed, the cool dry air picks up the moisture in the tank and when run through your air tool or hoses, it then re-condenses. So you get water in your tools, water in your paint gun and water in your plasma cutter which is not good for consumables life and for smooth nice cuts.
So dry air is needed. Again, the dryer the better. I did some more research and found an idea that I wanted to try. Its a device you can build called a Franzinator. It is named after a guy who has been tinkering around with the idea for over twenty some years. What it is is a 2 inch x 36 inch pipe with end caps and an inlet, an outlet and a drain. On the 1/2 inch inlet in the center, a 90 degree fitting is welded inside to aim the air towards the bottom of the Franzinator. What it does is cool the air and removes most of the moisture before it gets to your tank. There is a lot of chat on the internet about the Franzinator and how it works so if you want to learn more, Google Franzinator.
Does it work? OOOOH YEAH! My cuts with the PowerPlasma 50 are now much smoother and I have seen an increase in the lifespan of my consumables. I still run a filter before my air line and have noticed a huge decrease in the amount of water/oil that the filter gets and almost no water in the main tank. Almost none. The drain on the Franzinator sees a lot of water coming out of it and I cannot be more happy. I get cool dry air that requires almost no maintenance and no purchasing of expensive filters. This may even help the tank on your compressor last longer as there is very little water inside the tank to cause rust which is the number one cause of tank failure.
If you are looking for an inexpensive way to get rid of that pesky moisture that a compressor produces in the air, this project can save your consumables and make for smoother cuts. All for under a hundred bucks.