Upgrading my shop compressor, who likes what brand?
My current 60 gallon craftsman that flows 10.5 cfm at 90 PSI is now running constantly..I'm gonna kill the thing..but worse yet right now its causing alot more water in my traps with it running so much and the tank getting so hot. I kept a similar size air jet and nozzle in the new cabinet so its drawing similar CFM as the old cabinet, but the fact that I don't have to stop blasting to reposition bigger items in the cabinet like I did before is causing the compressor to never turn off while blasting now.
I'd like to get into a 2 stage in the 20 CFM range. 80 gallon is about all I have room for in the compressor area of the shop, so gotta stay there.
I see plenty of stuff offered by various manufacturers while looking around online.
Who likes what in here? Keep in mind I'm a full time powder coater and the compressor will be running for hours every day, 6 days a week so I need quality and durability, not looking for the cheapest thing that may or may not blow up in 12 months. The ability to purchase a warranty, and the company being strong and being around to service the warranty matters as well.
Thanks guys
Oh, in case anyone asks..yes obviously I have 220v power going to the compressor area, my current 60 gallon runs on 220v. I have 10 guage wire, so 30 amp draw in my max. Looks like most of the stuff I saw so far draws in the low 20 amp range so I should be ok there.
I had the ingersol upright 80gal single phase and that was loud and now i have the 3-phase and thats worse!
Quincy compressors are quiet and great rep like ingersol! Northern Tool sells them for a great price!
I had the ingersol upright 80gal single phase and that was loud and now i have the 3-phase and thats worse!
Quincy compressors are quiet and great rep like ingersol! Northern Tool sells them for a great price!
booney--I'm likely going to store the current 60 gallon rather than sell it or anything. Be good to have a backup in case the new one went down. My current one is 1 year old only with a 5 year onsite service warranty, would make a good backup to keep around.
How about Eaton?? I was goign to call them today. They seem to have good prices, and claim to be super quiet with good features listed.
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I did speak with an Eaton sales rep today who was very helpful. He said single stage is what I want, 2 stage would be a waste of money for me since I don't need mondo pressure.
I'm looking at the Eaton 7.5 hp 80 gallon single stage now. At the PSI I blast at(70-80 psi), it would support like 28 CFM..tha's awesome. Has an electronic waterdump you can set the timing on which is sweet. Runs at 72 DB sound wise, which is pretty damn quiet. I measured the dimensions and it'll fit where my current compressor is ok. Best of all they have a huge *** sale on the thing right now..$1399 instead of $2299.
The Eaton rep said Quincy is about the only company that's as good as them in his opinion. The quincy stuff is expensive for not as much compressor. $2300 or so for one that flows less CFM than this Eaton one.
I have a few more things to look into but overall I am liking what I heard on the Eaton today.
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If the pressure rating on the old tank is ok for the new compressors output, then I'd agree on plumbing it in as well for more air storage. Just be sure, some older units were only rated for 135psi where new ones often go to 175... i wouldn't risk it unless they match.
I won't be linking the tanks, 80 gallons is fine for me. Besides, more air storage means more time between the compressor cycling, but also means it has to run longer to fill them back up. Plus, I want to keep my current one in storage as a backup compressor. My compressor goes down, so does my whole shop..be nice to have an emergency backup that is ready to run if need be.
Chino man you are exacxtly correct..high volume, low pressure for what i do for a living. I don't blast at more than 80 PSI at most, don't run alot of air tools unless I'm porting a throttle body, and my powder gun runs at like 10-15 PSI lol. For sure don't need a 2 stage.
I differ with others on the 2 stage vs, 1 stage. I don't ever think that a 1 stage compressor is a good choice unless you are going to be working at very low pressures (less than 40 PSI). If you look at the curve of SCFM on a 2 stage versus a 1 stage, you will see that the volume drops like a rock as the pressure goes up on a single stage while is stays almost flat on a 2 stage.
Compressor ads always paint the unit they are selling in the most flattering light, but if you compare compressors at the same conditions, you will quickly see that most of the claims are just smoke and mirrors on some brands. Many compressors will claim 7 "peak horsepower", but be a 110 volt compressor! Any one with any sense knows that you can not supply more than 1 -1.5 hp with a 110 volt circuit.
Many single stage compressors will also claim a very high SCFM, but if you read the fine print, they are claiming it at 40PSIG. At 90 PSIG or 125 PSIG, the SCFM might be a fraction of what it was at 40. This is where a 2 stage really shines, the SCFM at 40 and at 90 PSIG are almost the same!
Regards, John McGraw


