Good Video ! Bottom Line Guys - Change Your Vacuum pump oil Often , Test Pump often & Try to use The Factory Recommended oil That the Pump Was Designed & Built with. Note - It’s allways better to have Fresh vacuum pump oil oil of any brand than oil with moisture in it. A Good Rule of Thumb is Check to See if your pump will pull down to spec. Before , During & after Evacuation. Allways Store a Vacuum pump With Clean oil in its sump. Internal metal parts can & will be damaged if Pumps are stored with Moisture laden oil in thier sumps. Good to see u back on the Tube Ak.
So I bought a nrp8di my company provides black gold and a synthetic oil from appion. My research shows shell t 46 on the navac oil. I know your a brand guy now. What oil are susceptible to use?
Why can't you just take used oil (with moisture) and heat the oil in a pot on the stove to above the boiling point of water (100 deg C) for 10 minutes? Wouldn't this boil off all the moisture in the oil, and then once it cools you can reuse the oil? Case in point: When the oil is manufactured, the manufacture obviously needs to treat the oil in order to remove moisture at the point of packaging. It seems that this is likely done by heating the oil up to a point where any water contained within, boils off. Am I missing something here?
Need more of your videos on NAVAC tools. I want to get one of those little battery operated pumps just for the neatness factor. And get one of those eBay or Amazon battery adapters so I could use my 12 amp hour Milwaukee batteries and walk away without worrying about staying away too long and coming back to a dead battery.
@@vigons90 i’ve been thinking of getting one just because not having to deal with the extension cord. Not many people know that actually Makita Japanese manufacture made a battery powered vacuum pump over a decade ago. It’s nothing new
Good Video ! Bottom Line Guys - Change Your Vacuum pump oil Often , Test Pump often & Try to use The Factory Recommended oil That the Pump Was Designed & Built with. Note - It’s allways better to have Fresh vacuum pump oil oil of any brand than oil with moisture in it. A Good Rule of Thumb is Check to See if your pump will pull down to spec. Before , During & after Evacuation. Allways Store a Vacuum pump With Clean oil in its sump. Internal metal parts can & will be damaged if Pumps are stored with Moisture laden oil in thier sumps. Good to see u back on the Tube Ak.
Love your videos man! You need to do more!
Id love to see a head to head with Navac and fieldpiece.
One more I want to convert to a trublue set up is there a KF16 TO MALE NPT. Is there a navac part number?
Can I use refrigerator oil instead of the the vacuum pump oil because I can't find it
So I bought a nrp8di my company provides black gold and a synthetic oil from appion. My research shows shell t 46 on the navac oil. I know your a brand guy now. What oil are susceptible to use?
Good info..
BTW you miss spelled health😘
He seems not to care 😁
thanks man corrected
Why can't you just take used oil (with moisture) and heat the oil in a pot on the stove to above the boiling point of water (100 deg C) for 10 minutes? Wouldn't this boil off all the moisture in the oil, and then once it cools you can reuse the oil? Case in point: When the oil is manufactured, the manufacture obviously needs to treat the oil in order to remove moisture at the point of packaging. It seems that this is likely done by heating the oil up to a point where any water contained within, boils off. Am I missing something here?
Need more of your videos on NAVAC tools. I want to get one of those little battery operated pumps just for the neatness factor.
And get one of those eBay or Amazon battery adapters so I could use my 12 amp hour Milwaukee batteries and walk away without worrying about staying away too long and coming back to a dead battery.
I have the 4 cfm battery charge vacuum pump and it’s time saver and also so simple and realiable
@@vigons90 i’ve been thinking of getting one just because not having to deal with the extension cord.
Not many people know that actually Makita Japanese manufacture made a battery powered vacuum pump over a decade ago. It’s nothing new