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Mechanical, Build & Pneumatics·Lesson 32 of 47

Operational Testing: Relief Valve, Pressure Switch, and Leaks

The safety and reliability tests from the official Pneumatics Manual: confirm the switch shuts off the compressor, validate the relief valve, and hunt down leaks.

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Test 1: Pressure Switch / Compressor Shutoff

After plumbing and wiring, confirm the compressor stops at the right pressure. With the vent plug closed, power the robot, connect the Driver Station, and enable — the compressor should run automatically. Watch the stored-pressure gauge: it should shut off around 110-120 psi. The Manual is emphatic: if pressure ever exceeds 125 psi, disable or power off the robot immediately. If pressure stops climbing before shutoff (well below 110 psi), you have a significant leak — fix it before continuing.

Test 2: Validate the Relief Valve

The relief valve is your mechanical last line of defense. To test a factory-set valve: let the system build until the compressor shuts off, then jumper across the pressure-switch terminals (with alligator clips or a metal tool) so the compressor keeps running. The relief valve should begin venting at ~125 psi; if the system reaches 130 psi, immediately remove the jumper and disable. Many relief valves are loud when they trigger — that is normal. For an adjustable valve, the Manual gives a calibration procedure to dial it to relieve in the 120-125 psi band and lock the locknut.

Test 3: Leak Test

Leaks waste your pre-charged air and can leave you powerless mid-match. Charge to ~110-120 psi, then disable and listen. A good target is less than ~10 psi drop over 30 minutes — that lets a robot charged in the queue keep most of its air by match start.

Finding leaks:

  • Large leaks: listen for hissing and feel with a wet finger. Common causes: a relieving regulator installed backwards, a mis-plumbed valve/manifold, a missing plug, a tube not fully inserted, or a loose threaded fitting.
  • Small leaks: brush a bubble solution (leak-detector fluid or ~4:1 water-to-dish-soap) on each joint and watch for bubbles. Cover electronics and gearboxes first. Common causes: threads with poor/no PTFE sealing, slightly loose threads, or tubing cut off-square or under tension.
  • Test both cylinder states: actuate each cylinder to its other position and re-test, so you check the seals on both sides.

Make Testing Routine

Run these three tests after every major plumbing change and again before each event. A system that shuts off correctly, relieves at 125 psi, and holds pressure for 30 minutes is safe, legal, and competition-ready.

Key takeaways

  • Verify the compressor shuts off around 110-120 psi; if it exceeds 125 psi, disable or power off immediately.
  • Validate the relief valve by jumpering the pressure switch and confirming it vents at ~125 psi (loud is normal).
  • Leak target: less than ~10 psi drop over 30 minutes; use hissing/feel for big leaks and a bubble solution for small ones.
  • Test cylinders in both states and re-run all three tests after major changes and before every event.

Lesson quiz

Required

Answer all 3 questions correctly to complete this lesson.

1.To what pressure must the compressor relief valve be set on an FRC robot?

2.During operational testing, at roughly what pressure should the compressor automatically stop running under roboRIO control?

3.When the manual vent plug valve is actuated with the robot powered off, what should all the pneumatic gauges read?

Answer every question to submit.