air compressors

Discussion in 'Off-Topic' started by Taras, Jan 26, 2008.

  1. Taras
    Offline

    Taras BANNED

    Messages:
    217
    Likes Received:
    12
    Trophy Points:
    0
    Location:
    Saint Paul, Minnesota
    I was thinking about getting an air compressor but I dont know what will be good for an impact wrench and a spray gun. How many gallons should the tank be and how many cfm and psi? Help me out.
    Taras
     
  2. ej20
    Offline

    ej20 Well-Known Member

    Messages:
    1,737
    Likes Received:
    2
    Trophy Points:
    223
    I'll be asking the same question.
     
  3. prezawagon
    Offline

    prezawagon Well-Known Member

    Messages:
    3,438
    Likes Received:
    49
    Trophy Points:
    233
    Location:
    Redmond
    It really depends on the tools, most tools will list the minimum cfm required to run them. I know impact wrenches can vary a lot on required CFM depending on the size of the wrench. I'd say go do some shopping and look at the requirements of the tools and compare prices and see what you can afford.
     
  4. curly2k3
    Offline

    curly2k3 Well-Known Member

    Messages:
    10,535
    Likes Received:
    1,140
    Trophy Points:
    473
    Location:
    Silent Hill, Jackass
    if you plan to paint with it you need a larger ready source of air and the higher the PSI the better
     
  5. silence
    Offline

    silence New Member

    Messages:
    279
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    0
    honestly, you need a ton of air to make it worthwhile

    i'd go 50+ gallons if possible

    I have a very old school belt drive air compressor (porter cable) from the 70s filling to converted lp tanks with a custom air dryer built in. I do a lot of sanding with tha set-up and it's amazing.

    -drew
     
  6. Taras
    Offline

    Taras BANNED

    Messages:
    217
    Likes Received:
    12
    Trophy Points:
    0
    Location:
    Saint Paul, Minnesota
    So 25 gal 4 cfm and like 90psi won't cut it?
     
  7. Ryan
    Offline

    Ryan Sled drifting master

    Messages:
    2,214
    Likes Received:
    169
    Trophy Points:
    248
    Location:
    Behind Readymix's car on a sled
    Taras: IMO it's not the airtools that require all the size and PSI, but the paint. You want to make sure that you're getting a constant flow.

    I have a little 11 gal compressor that works great for my airtools, but i'd never think about painting on it. If I was to paint on it, i'd prep for a long, slow, painful process which could be messed up from runs.
     
  8. Taras
    Offline

    Taras BANNED

    Messages:
    217
    Likes Received:
    12
    Trophy Points:
    0
    Location:
    Saint Paul, Minnesota
    the only things I would paint with of would be like fog covers and maybe a lip or side skirt. So nothing huge.
     
  9. silence
    Offline

    silence New Member

    Messages:
    279
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    0
    you won't be able to sand anything either-
     
  10. webcrawlr
    Offline

    webcrawlr Well-Known Member

    Messages:
    1,361
    Likes Received:
    7
    Trophy Points:
    223
    Location:
    minneapolis
    I'd also google search the unit and see what the noise is like. Some of the cheaper units that are large enough to use air tools seem to get poor reviews on that category... if that's a concern of yours.
     
  11. Nuke
    Offline

    Nuke Well-Known Member

    Messages:
    6,155
    Likes Received:
    814
    Trophy Points:
    348
    Gender:
    Male
    Location:
    Saint Paul
    Taras, you can fit like a 100gal up in yo crib dawg!
     
  12. Vector
    Offline

    Vector Rally Organizer

    Messages:
    2,711
    Likes Received:
    415
    Trophy Points:
    268
    Location:
    Minneapolis
    You can in fact, run most air tools on a much smaller compressor than people say.

    I've got a 4.5gal Porter-Cable plus a 10 gallon air tank with a few extra fittings allowing me to use the tank in-line with the compressor. It runs impact wrenches just fine. Die grinders and air hammers have a pretty short run time and a lot of recovery time, but it all depends on how much you're going to use them. I wouldn't use a sander on this rig, but I have successfully used HVLP paint guns for small parts.

    It's hardly ideal, and eventually I'll replace it with a ~60gal belt-driven oiled unit, but it does get the job done.
     
  13. Grayguy
    Offline

    Grayguy Well-Known Member

    Messages:
    1,427
    Likes Received:
    84
    Trophy Points:
    133
    Location:
    Hicken House
    When buying any long term-expensive tools, it's always best to buy the biggest/nicest you can. If you can afford a $1500 compressor, do it, you'll be happy when you have it the next 50 years. When i bought mine I could manage about $5-600, and I ended up with a 60gallon 12.5 cfm unit.
     
  14. silence
    Offline

    silence New Member

    Messages:
    279
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    0
    the cheap ones cost enough that it's worth using a friend's or going big- to put it simply

    sort of like welders