What's new

Manifolds above bays or in Equipment room

Nuphoenix

Active member
Joined
Nov 5, 2019
Messages
158
Reaction score
31
Points
28
Location
Glen Daniel, WV
I'm trying to come up with a plan to restore the wash I bought. The seperate lines used to all run up to the attic and had a panel to feed everything up to a manifold above each bay. The lines were not run to the center of the bays and my roof is sloped. The trough that holds the lines is on the high side so you have to crawl in the low side to work on them. I want to run the new lines down the center so you can stand somewhat while inspecting/servicing them. My question is whether I can just have a manifold in the equipment room and just run high pressure lines to the main boom and inject chemical in the equipment room? Can I use the same line to use low pressure functions? There are separate lines for foam brush.
 

MEP001

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 30, 2007
Messages
16,665
Reaction score
3,946
Points
113
Location
Texas
You can, but neither you nor your customers will like the long changeover time.

FWIW, I had at another wash used a programmable relay to blow out the high pressure line from the boom to the gun after an idle period, and that really helped speed the low pressure to the gun, from 16 seconds or so on tire cleaner down to less than three. Obviously the longer line you'll be dealing with will make a big difference - I would at least run spot free to the boom.

There is self serve equipment that uses the bay pump to move everything to the bay, but in my fairly limited experience with it, it's wasteful and doesn't work very well compared to individual tubing lines.

Maybe it would be worth the money to use something like 1/4" Synflex. It's expensive but it should last forever under low pressure. Another FWIW, I've always used nylon tubing and I always put something in the room to protect the tubing against a failed check valve at the boom. Wherever it's not been completely protected from light, I use all black so there's never any degradation. I've taken down clear nylon tubing that after 5 years or so would shatter like a fluorescent tube when it hits the ground. Black tubing doesn't do that.
 

Earl Weiss

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 31, 2007
Messages
6,372
Reaction score
943
Points
113
I'm trying to come up with a plan to restore the wash I bought. The seperate lines used to all run up to the attic and had a panel to feed everything up to a manifold above each bay. The lines were not run to the center of the bays and my roof is sloped. The trough that holds the lines is on the high side s
Photos? Can you run a trough on top of the roof?
 

Jeff_L

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 27, 2007
Messages
1,246
Reaction score
31
Points
48
Location
Missouri
IMHO manifolds above each bay. Reduces the switchover time. Pain to repair if you don’t have the headroom, but your customers will be happier.
 

Earl Weiss

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 31, 2007
Messages
6,372
Reaction score
943
Points
113
The plan so far is to move the trough to the center of the attic. But I'd rather just run 2-3 lines per bay instead of all the chemical lines along with the high/low/FB lines.
When I re did my 8 bays low pressure lines there were we had 7 air and low pressure lines. They were on spools in the ER. Put a piece of pipe thru spools and rested pipe on blocks so they rotated freely . Pulled all 7 at once . Start with furthest bay.
 

tdlconceptsllc

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 30, 2013
Messages
1,060
Reaction score
427
Points
83
Location
NC
I just redid my 10 bay self serve this week was a major job. If you run 1 line and not air & liquid for each product the chemical show is no where as good and mixing. You should have no problem with switchover on a small wash as long as you have 3/8 HP hose
 

Burky

Member
Joined
Aug 25, 2020
Messages
63
Reaction score
27
Points
18
I’m putting mine above the bays. I have a question for some of you with more experience than me. Do I need a check valve on the manifold where my high-pressure line feeds in? Or do I only need to check valves on the low pressure lines?
 

tdlconceptsllc

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 30, 2013
Messages
1,060
Reaction score
427
Points
83
Location
NC
I’m putting mine above the bays. I have a question for some of you with more experience than me. Do I need a check valve on the manifold where my high-pressure line feeds in? Or do I only need to check valves on the low pressure lines?
Low pressure ones only and spot free also. Put a non working swivel on manifold incase you ever have to change hose
 
Top