
Originally Posted by
fontgeek
Save your money, and try this;
Add a 50' hose between your compressor and your work area, add a watertrap, regulator, and filter setup to the work area end of the hose. Let this setup stay at your work area, and have your airbrush or manifold hook up to it rather than directly to the compressor. The length of hose lets the air cool down, which lets the moisture go from steam back to it's liquid form (water). It's the liquid form that watertraps are made to catch, not steam.
The second trap, filter, and regulator will give you cleaner and drier air, and let you have better control of your air right where you are working, it will also let you move your compressor further away, which means that it won't have to suck in paint contaminated air, so it will live a longer and healthier life too!
It also saves a lot of airfilters from an early death.
While initially this will cost a bit more than the one filter you were looking at, it will do a much better job for ALL your brushes, your compressor will do better and live longer, and you won't be fighting any noise or heat issues with your compressor not being next to you.
Those little water filters are neat, but like the one at the compressor, they are made to catch liquid, not steam, and because of the way their made, they tend to not do well with screwing and unscrewing from brushes.
If you want your air super dry, get yourself a big desicant dryer. You might look at DeVilbiss, they make several models, as does SATA and some others, be warned though, these aren't cheap, and you have to replace the filter material on a regular basis, and that stuff isn't cheap either.