Something is wrong with my compressor, W31 AD, over the weekend. I replaced the engine oil last week and started to run the compressor Sunday afternoon. I run about 10 min to fill the new LF appliance recently bought and stopped the compressor to adjust the set up pressure on the priority valve of LF appliance. Therefore, I drained all air from the appliance and run the compressor again, but the pressure didnt go up more than 500 psi this time, so I checked the compressor and found out that the air was blowing out at the short blue drain tube.
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Any expertise?
I got in trouble as well...
Thanks in advance!
That sound is the sound of an Alkin W31 running with the first stage drain open (the one with the short blue tube blowing air in your pictures) and the other drains closed.
Mine is a manual drain unit, and I had this condition when doing the initial run-in on the compressor. In my case, I was to open all drains and run it for 10 minutes building up no pressure. After 10 min, I restarted it and closed the first stage drain then opened it and got that sound.
I talked to the CDN distributor of the Alkin compressor after that, and was told that the sound is the sound of the third stage floating pressure piston being contacted by the third stage drive piston. Basically, stage 1 and 2 are pistons connected to the crankshaft and do not float. The 3rd stage piston is much smaller, and so they have a larger piston connected to the crankshaft which then moves the floating piston up and down to give the high pressure output from the 3rd stage.
If there is insufficient pressure built up in the 1st and 2nd stages, then the 3rd stage piston will not return properly after each stroke and you will get the smacking sound that you hear.
Since your compressor has auto-drains, it would seem that the first stage auto-drain is stuck open for some reason. It could be blocked as some have said, or the solenoid could be stuck or some electrical fault could be keeping it open. As I don't have auto-drains, I can't tell - but since the compressor should have drains open when turned off, I'd suspect the solenoid is set up such that when the power is off, the drain is open. WHen you apply power, the solenoid should move under electrical power and close the drain. Either this is not happening, or (as said earlier) the drain is blocked somehow.
Given the nature of "things that can go wrong", I'd first suspect the solenoid is not firing properly to close the drain when you turn the compressor on.
Sorry, but I can't tell you how to fix it as my unit is manual drain.
Cheers,
-S