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Functions of an Air Hose Tube
October 24, 2009
An air hose has a very wide presence in the modern world. If you are out on the beach or the seas relaxing, or involved with some construction or mechanical work, or even in health care, the odds are you will run into this piece of tool.
It is in fact a very straightforward device with a very simple function. It is a flexible hollow rod-shaped tube that transfers air or gas from one end to the other. The drift of air may depend on an air compressor that compacts air or gas thus accelerating its flow through the hose. The increase of the natural pressure of air in a enclosed space also helps speed up the flow. Find out more about this topic at our buy air hose guide.
SCUBA and surface-supplied aquanauts would be unable to respire without air hoses. The compressed air within the scuba tanks or the breathing gas supplied to the helmets of Hooka divers have to traverse air hoses.
On land, one of the most common sites to stumble on an air hose are filling stations where they normally have an air compressor attached to a hose for tire inflation. Some vehicle owners may also have their own mini-compressors for this purpose. And if you have to take your car to a car service shop you may find several hoses winding their way all over the floor running pneumatic wrenches, ratchets, drills, screwdrivers, or paint guns. In a construction zone, air hoses assist the provision of power to nail guns, polishers, grinders, sandblasters, and even hack saws.
It is necessary that an air hose should remain airtight otherwise the pressure delivered to may not be enough to trigger the air-driven tools. Therefore, sharp corners and abrasive materials should be shunned when using a hose. Another way of safeguarding it from (accidental|unintentional|inadvertent} destruction is through the use of an air hose reel. This is a casing, often made of metal, which automatically retracts the hose whenever it is not in use. This minimizes the possibility of its being cut and abraded.
