The Pneumatic Tanker Thread

Discussion in 'Tanker, Bulk and Dump Trucking Forum' started by Air Cooled, Sep 6, 2016.

  1. DMAX66

    DMAX66 Light Load Member

    170
    146
    Nov 11, 2010
    Chicagoland
    0
    Vacuum loading
    [​IMG]
     
    Bud A. and Air Cooled Thank this.
  2. Truckers Report Jobs

    Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds

    Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.

  3. RockinChair

    RockinChair Road Train Member

    5,012
    12,569
    Feb 19, 2012
    CC, TX
    0
    Dang. Blowing into a pit is *really* fast when you have swingaways.
     
  4. RockinChair

    RockinChair Road Train Member

    5,012
    12,569
    Feb 19, 2012
    CC, TX
    0
    Dmax66, that's a nice looking truck you got there. When you're unloading, how do you keep how do you keep the air cool enough so that it won't soften the plastic pellets? When I worked at an IM plant, the pellets we ordered would begin to melt at about 400 F.
     
    DMAX66 Thanks this.
  5. DMAX66

    DMAX66 Light Load Member

    170
    146
    Nov 11, 2010
    Chicagoland
    0
    The trailer has an air to air cooler with electric fans on it. Works just like a turbo intercooler. Keeps the air temp below 110. Some of the harder plastics have a higher melting point and don't require a cooler. We also run our blowers at 800 rpm to keep temps down.
     
    RockinChair Thanks this.
  6. Air Cooled

    Air Cooled Road Train Member

    1,315
    1,094
    Jul 17, 2011
    Baltimore
    0
    Pretty interesting on the pellet process. I was pulling a set of trailers (cement) and I was unloading @ 850 RPM that took about 55 minutes. I'm hooked up to a different set now and that same RPM was taking about an hour and fifteen! They are both Beall but different years and models. I dropped the blower down to 800 and that seemed to cut off close to ten minutes. Im not sure if trying 750 would be faster?? The product hose already barely moves at 800 and I feel little air surge in the hose at that RPM.
     
  7. rbrtwbstr

    rbrtwbstr Road Train Member

    3,363
    7,728
    Jul 11, 2012
    in the bush somewhere
    0
    I was always told that all trailers unload differently, even though they may be the same make and model. I know this trailer I have now, which I've had from new, doesn't unload as good as the last new one I had. And they're identical.


    @DMAX66, do you start unloading the front hopper first with plastic, so as not to melt it? Or don't it matter with the cooler?
     
    Air Cooled Thanks this.
  8. DMAX66

    DMAX66 Light Load Member

    170
    146
    Nov 11, 2010
    Chicagoland
    0
    Yes we unload the #1 hopper first so that the top air pipe is not blowing hot air on the plastic. One of the plastics I used to haul called EVA was as soft as a gummy bear and even with a air cooler you could melt it if the #1 hopper was not unloaded first
     
    RockinChair Thanks this.
  9. DMAX66

    DMAX66 Light Load Member

    170
    146
    Nov 11, 2010
    Chicagoland
    0
    Picture of the air cooler
    [​IMG]
     
    LoneCowboy and RockinChair Thank this.
  10. RockinChair

    RockinChair Road Train Member

    5,012
    12,569
    Feb 19, 2012
    CC, TX
    0

    That is absolutely true, no two trailers unload the same. What causes one trailer to unload in record time will cause another to plug up and still another to unload slowly. I used to tell my trainees that pneumatic trailers are like women, each new one comes with a learning curve.
     
    Air Cooled Thanks this.
  11. rbrtwbstr

    rbrtwbstr Road Train Member

    3,363
    7,728
    Jul 11, 2012
    in the bush somewhere
    0
    Oh my God, I'm gonna pitch a fit soon. Last night, at my favorite stop, I worked for almost half an hour to unhook a hose. The fitting on the end was new about two months ago. It has since been beaten with a sledgehammer to the point of being egg shaped, and almost useless. Nothing irritates me more than seeing someone take a hammer to an aluminum hose fitting.

    I carry a wire brush, and brush the fittings before each use. Our other drivers just get a bigger hammer.:angry4:

    On a better note, the owner of the company called today and asked what truck I'd like to replace my current one. I'm really torn between the Western Star 4900ex like I have now, and the new 5700xe. If we'd go with the 4900, itd be a glider with a fresh rebuilt Cat under the hood, with a 13 speed. The 5700 would be a Detroit with an autoshift. Any thoughts?
     
    Last edited: Oct 12, 2016
  • Truckers Report Jobs

    Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds

    Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.