Author Topic: Post up your compressor(s) -  (Read 20019 times)

Offline goodfellow

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Post up your compressor(s) -
« on: August 26, 2018, 10:48:53 AM »
I have three -- a 60 gal. vertical V-twin PUMA that runs the main garage (it was advertised at 6HP, but in reality it's only 3HP continuous)



... a 2HP 30 gal vertical tandem twin Kobalt that runs the small machine shop next door to the garage,



and a really old (had it since the early 70's Montgomey Ward 1/2HP  7.5 gal portable


Offline AnsonJ

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Re: Post up your compressor(s) -
« Reply #1 on: September 03, 2018, 11:36:53 PM »
I have a 220volt Craftsman from the late 60s or 70's.  the story behind this compressor is that it was used as the machine shed shop air on my Grandpa and uncles farm up to the point when they retired and sold the farm in the early 2000s.  (grandpa was in his mid 80s by then and Grandma was not doing well healthwise.  as small as the compressor really is, I used it to paint one of his tractors in the mid 80s and my cousin painted another one with it.  He gave it to me around 2003 and it sat unused because I didn't have a 220 volt outlet free in my house in IL and the motor cannot be rewired to run 110v, then we moved to IN and did the apartment life thing for about 3 years.  When we bought this house in 2011, I specifically had a 220 volt outlet wired for it.  still works great.





I also have a small portable compressor that I have not even got out of the box yet, but it is good for airing up tires and running a small nailgun (which is what I got it for in the first place, but found that the 50' hose that I have on the old one reached pretty much anywhere I needed it to go for that project)


AJ
"If it weren't for physics and law enforcement, I'd be unstoppable!"

Offline goodfellow

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Re: Post up your compressor(s) -
« Reply #2 on: September 04, 2018, 08:29:40 AM »
That is the exact compressor I had for many years. It was a workhorse and it painted many cars. It ran in my shops for many years as I moved from apartments, to townhouses, and finally single family homes. A great quality machine, and it was very well made.

Offline goodfellow

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Re: Post up your compressor(s) -
« Reply #3 on: November 16, 2018, 08:42:47 PM »
Wow -- only two compressor posts since August!!! AnsonJ and I must be the only two guys on the forum that own compressors --  >:D >:D >:D

Offline DeadNutz

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Re: Post up your compressor(s) -
« Reply #4 on: November 16, 2018, 08:51:17 PM »
Only have pics of one of my compressors. It is a NAPA branded Bridgeport-Schrader 5hp 80gal tank that is like brand new. I bought the contents of a shop mainly to get the compressor. I also have a 220V Craftsman like the AnsonJ's along with a 120V that is similar to the Craftsman.

Offline goodfellow

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Re: Post up your compressor(s) -
« Reply #5 on: November 16, 2018, 08:58:21 PM »
Ran across this Internet picture while searching for some vintage Sears compressor parts. It's a vintage 1960's (early 70's) 1HP 12 Gal. compressor that ran on either 120 or 220 volt circuits. My grandfather and dad were gearheads and they worked together all through the post war era and into the early 1960's fixing and working on cars. But it was this little compressor that they saved their money for -- within less than six months they bought one in the mid-1960's and they used it to rebuild and paint many cars. I was always amazing at the productivity that those two guys could muster with only a small 12 gal. compressor. Air tools, paint guns, and compressors were very expensive at that time, and that little unit powered through a lot of cars.

These days most of us have much larger compressors in our shops, but in those days this was as good as it got for the average DIY guy.

Offline goodfellow

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Re: Post up your compressor(s) -
« Reply #6 on: November 16, 2018, 08:59:36 PM »
Only have pics of one of my compressors. It is a NAPA branded Bridgeport-Schrader 5hp 80gal tank that is like brand new. I bought the contents of a shop mainly to get the compressor. I also have a 220V Craftsman like the AnsonJ's along with a 120V that is similar to the Craftsman.


Great looking unit DN -- professional quality all the way. Thanks for posting!

Offline gtermini

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Re: Post up your compressor(s) -
« Reply #7 on: November 16, 2018, 08:59:54 PM »
I'll play.

My primary is an Energair 2 horz 60 gal. 5 HP 1ph 3450 rpm, 17.5 cfm two stage. Nice small footprint. Nothing to write home about. Noisy, but makes air fine. I very, very often wish for more available air. I think I will look for a 15-20 HP recip unit when I upgrade. My use is too intermittent for a screw.

Very similar to this one


My field use compressor/when I need extra air is an XAIR SC70 Honda powered 70 cfm @100psi screw. Neat little unit at under 400 lbs. The screw is no bigger than two beer cans laid alongside each other. It has no problem keeping an air arc or big angle grinder running. It will run a 3/16 nozzle off a blast pot all day, but lacks the displacement to run a 1/4" over 65-70 psi. I've owned two 185 cfm trailer mounted diesel compressors in the past, and may buy another if I see the right deal. This 70 is too small to run a mole for boring sleeves under things.



Greyson
« Last Edit: November 16, 2018, 09:02:42 PM by gtermini »

Offline stokester

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Re: Post up your compressor(s) -
« Reply #8 on: November 17, 2018, 02:39:59 PM »
When I first was detailing the plans for my garage/shop I told my wife that it had to include a compressor that would never need to be upgraded because of capacity.  She was rather shocked when I returned from Sears with the largest one they sold at the time, she still refers to it as "Mr. Compressor".  It's been more that I need but has really come in handy now that I have all my air tools at the house.
Nick
Yorktown, VA

Offline DeadNutz

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Re: Post up your compressor(s) -
« Reply #9 on: November 17, 2018, 05:04:22 PM »
Stokester, my sister has a CM compressor just like that plumbed into the barn at her ranch. That will be the last thing to come out of the barn when she sells the place. Our farrier wants to buy it for her shop as she needs a better compressor to run her power hammer.

Offline highland512

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Re: Post up your compressor(s) -
« Reply #10 on: November 17, 2018, 08:45:14 PM »
What’s Sears?

My little “noise monster” as the wife calls it.



It’s a gutless, noisy, slow, and small capacity compressor but when it was moving ever other year it was perfect. It still fits the bill for house projects and airing up a tire but I am definitely on the hunt for a new one.

Offline goodfellow

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Re: Post up your compressor(s) -
« Reply #11 on: November 17, 2018, 08:54:16 PM »
Hey -- it's a compressed air source. If it works it's the right compressor.

While I was living in an apartment back in the 70's, I bought a small 7-1/2 gal. 1/2HP Wards compressor. It ran without tripping the apartment circuit breakers and it provided just enough air to run an air ratchet and light duty spray gun. I still have that thing -- just couldn't part with it.

Offline pep

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Re: Post up your compressor(s) -
« Reply #12 on: November 17, 2018, 09:16:44 PM »
This one lives outside in the breeze way, been out there10 years maybe. Stays powered 27 x 7 365. When not in use have a ball valve in the air supply line at the tank. It keeps the tanks charged, only runs when in use.

Very handy,

Pep
1776 ................... what happened!

Offline goodfellow

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Re: Post up your compressor(s) -
« Reply #13 on: November 17, 2018, 10:15:17 PM »
Pretty heavy duty Pep. That’s a mighty fine unit!


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Offline pep

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Re: Post up your compressor(s) -
« Reply #14 on: November 18, 2018, 07:48:32 AM »
Put the over size pressure gauge on just for grins.
It can be read from across the street LOL.
Pep
1776 ................... what happened!

Offline Brophy

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Re: Post up your compressor(s) -
« Reply #15 on: November 18, 2018, 01:20:07 PM »
Here's mine...



Never heard of the brand before but it seems to be a good compressor.

The 5hp Baldor motor sure sucks the hydro when it is cold...I have to shut off everything else in the shop and open the relief valve on the head when it first starts up in anything but the dead of summer.

Offline Lookin4_67GalaxieConv

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Re: Post up your compressor(s) -
« Reply #16 on: November 21, 2018, 01:06:29 AM »
Ran across this Internet picture while searching for some vintage Sears compressor parts. It's a vintage 1960's (early 70's) 1HP 12 Gal. compressor that ran on either 120 or 220 volt circuits. My grandfather and dad were gearheads and they worked together all through the post war era and into the early 1960's fixing and working on cars. But it was this little compressor that they saved their money for -- within less than six months they bought one in the mid-1960's and they used it to rebuild and paint many cars. I was always amazing at the productivity that those two guys could muster with only a small 12 gal. compressor. Air tools, paint guns, and compressors were very expensive at that time, and that little unit powered through a lot of cars.

These days most of us have much larger compressors in our shops, but in those days this was as good as it got for the average DIY guy.

I have that exact compressor.  As well as my Dayton for mobile compressors.
boop/bop/beep

Offline muddy

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Re: Post up your compressor(s) -
« Reply #17 on: November 27, 2018, 08:48:48 PM »
Here's mine didn't work (pump) when I paid $60 for it. A $20 piston ring and gasket set later and she does the job!

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Offline goodfellow

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Re: Post up your compressor(s) -
« Reply #18 on: November 27, 2018, 09:01:09 PM »
Is that an oil-less compressor Tim?

Offline muddy

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Re: Post up your compressor(s) -
« Reply #19 on: November 28, 2018, 06:47:48 AM »
Is that an oil-less compressor Tim?
Yes it is.

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Offline highland512

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Re: Post up your compressor(s) -
« Reply #20 on: November 29, 2018, 07:37:06 AM »

... a 2HP 30 gal vertical tandem twin Kobalt that runs the small machine shop next door to the garage,





Do you like this compressor? I was looking at a similar unit only it is on a 60gal tank and labeled husky. I see 4 of them are going through an auction this weekend locally, they look like they would be noisy. 

Offline goodfellow

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Re: Post up your compressor(s) -
« Reply #21 on: November 29, 2018, 07:58:27 AM »
I like it a lot -- mainly for one reason. It runs on a 20A 120V circuit all day long without tripping a breaker. It doesn't produce more noise than any other twin cylinder, but the fan shroud is all metal and it echoes the pump noise. Were it plastic, it would be much more quiet. The unit pumps up to 150psi factory setting -- which is remarkable for a small single stage unit. I've even used it for my blast cabinet when my main compressor was down with a broken fan belt.

The only real issue I have is with the cheap tires -- they deflate over the course of a month and need to be pumped up regularly. In my case the thing sits stationary most of the time, but before moving it I usually have to pump the tires up. -- an annoyance, but I can live with it. 
« Last Edit: November 29, 2018, 08:01:24 AM by goodfellow »

Offline highland512

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Re: Post up your compressor(s) -
« Reply #22 on: November 29, 2018, 10:37:31 AM »
This is the compressor I looked at. They have 4ea of them that where floor models from HD.

https://www.homedepot.com/p/Husky-60-Gal-Stationary-Electric-Air-Compressor-C602H/205389936

Offline goodfellow

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Re: Post up your compressor(s) -
« Reply #23 on: November 29, 2018, 11:36:56 AM »
This is the compressor I looked at. They have 4ea of them that where floor models from HD.

https://www.homedepot.com/p/Husky-60-Gal-Stationary-Electric-Air-Compressor-C602H/205389936

I think the OEM is Campbell Hausfeld on those units and they are a good homeowner grade setup.

Offline goodfellow

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Re: Post up your compressor(s) -
« Reply #24 on: December 06, 2018, 10:36:23 AM »
Here's mine...



Never heard of the brand before but it seems to be a good compressor.

The 5hp Baldor motor sure sucks the hydro when it is cold...I have to shut off everything else in the shop and open the relief valve on the head when it first starts up in anything but the dead of summer.

THAT is about as good as it gets in "compressor land" Brophy. Saylor-Beall was at the top of the heap at one point in time. Their stuff is legendary.

Offline Elroy

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Re: Post up your compressor(s) -
« Reply #25 on: January 03, 2019, 06:43:31 PM »
Elroy is pleased to post up a few pics of his IR two stage

along with his recently installed roof mounted "hose reel"



Offline Elroy

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Re: Post up your compressor(s) -
« Reply #26 on: January 03, 2019, 06:45:20 PM »
Have no idea how the welder ended up in there

Offline goodfellow

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Re: Post up your compressor(s) -
« Reply #27 on: January 03, 2019, 07:13:01 PM »
Very nice Elroy -- that is a slick setup. Two-stage is the way to go if you can afford it.

Offline Elroy

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Re: Post up your compressor(s) -
« Reply #28 on: January 03, 2019, 07:39:47 PM »
Very nice Elroy -- that is a slick setup. Two-stage is the way to go if you can afford it.

Thank you kindly. Elroy can assure you, he is a one lucky boy to have accumulated what he has to this point. Elroy purchased that 60 Gallon IR from Sears about 15 years ago for less than a Grand. As Elroy is sure you're aware, a two stage takes substantially more today.





You'll notice the belt guard is missing.Elroy removed the belt guard about 10 year ago when he relocated and has not taken the effort to reinstall the guard. The pump has limited access when it's shoved in the corner. Other projects have simply taken precedent. Maybe someday Elroy will reinstall the belt guard as that would empty some of the storage shelves. At this point, no belt guard is a non-issue for Elroy. Just keep your hands away and it works just fine at 175 psi. That two stage pressure helps a lot when pushing air a 100 foot outside through 3/8 line.