Hi all. Thought I would post this in hopes it saves anyone from the potential disaster I could have had in my shop!
Was working on a project when my wife came home and reminded me we were going out for dinner in an hour with friends....
I quickly finished what I was doing (glue up ) and hit the shower to get cleaned up to go out. ( I left the stapler on the bench still attached to the air hose and compressor on)
The next morning I returned to the shop to find my compressor running and air leaking out of the trigger valve of the stapler I was using........( an o-ring had split )
Not sure how long the compressor had been running, but it was very hot (so was the room) and had filled the air hose and stapler with water, so I'm assuming it had been running most of the night..
Good thing I didn't have to work the next morning or I may not have found this in time. The compressor is a Mac2400, so it's pretty quiet to begin with and I did not hear it running until I opened the overhead door in the garage (detached).
I don't know how many times I've forgotten to disconnect the air tool from the compressor over the years but will not do that again. I'm not in the habit of unplugging the compressor either, but it will be my newly adopted practice when I am finished puttering for the day. I do not have a dedicated circuit for the compressor as it sits under my MFT with my vacuum, but they are now plugged into a duplex receptacle on the end of a short extension cord that I will unplug when I'm done for the day......
Still not sure if the compressor is fried, but it was hot enough to start leaking oil........I drained the oil and will pick up some fresh oil today and see if it is ok, but not too worried as it can be replaced, burning down my shop and trying to replace everything would be very heartbreaking.......
I will be pulling a dedicated circuit beside my MFT shortly, and will make it a habit to throw the breaker when leaving the shop. I had this setup in my old place, and I believe it was good practice. For now I just have a sign on the door reminding me to unplug the compressor!!
While I'm sure most of you already do these things, I'm hoping by sending this it might make a few more of us "hobby" guys think about safety when the shop is empty.
take care,
Greg
Was working on a project when my wife came home and reminded me we were going out for dinner in an hour with friends....
I quickly finished what I was doing (glue up ) and hit the shower to get cleaned up to go out. ( I left the stapler on the bench still attached to the air hose and compressor on)
The next morning I returned to the shop to find my compressor running and air leaking out of the trigger valve of the stapler I was using........( an o-ring had split )
Not sure how long the compressor had been running, but it was very hot (so was the room) and had filled the air hose and stapler with water, so I'm assuming it had been running most of the night..
Good thing I didn't have to work the next morning or I may not have found this in time. The compressor is a Mac2400, so it's pretty quiet to begin with and I did not hear it running until I opened the overhead door in the garage (detached).
I don't know how many times I've forgotten to disconnect the air tool from the compressor over the years but will not do that again. I'm not in the habit of unplugging the compressor either, but it will be my newly adopted practice when I am finished puttering for the day. I do not have a dedicated circuit for the compressor as it sits under my MFT with my vacuum, but they are now plugged into a duplex receptacle on the end of a short extension cord that I will unplug when I'm done for the day......
Still not sure if the compressor is fried, but it was hot enough to start leaking oil........I drained the oil and will pick up some fresh oil today and see if it is ok, but not too worried as it can be replaced, burning down my shop and trying to replace everything would be very heartbreaking.......
I will be pulling a dedicated circuit beside my MFT shortly, and will make it a habit to throw the breaker when leaving the shop. I had this setup in my old place, and I believe it was good practice. For now I just have a sign on the door reminding me to unplug the compressor!!
While I'm sure most of you already do these things, I'm hoping by sending this it might make a few more of us "hobby" guys think about safety when the shop is empty.
take care,
Greg