Moving an Air Compressor - Aftermath
jw wrote:
On Apr 20, 7:09 am, Ignoramus32638 ignoramus32...@NOSPAM.
32638.invalid wrote:
On 2009-04-20, Jim Wilkins wrote:
On Apr 20, 1:28?am, Carla Fong wrote:
...
This is an old (1965) Wayne compressor - I googled and could not find
parts for them, so it may be not as great a deal as I thought.
Carla
I'd ask local repair shops, they might have dusty old parts for it on
a back shelf. I found an old set of rings for my Kellogg-American
compressor that way.
The price to pay for such a compressor, if it truly needs work beyond
the trivial stuff like copper tubing or regulators, should be
approximately zero.
i
A vertical tank is worth something even if the compressor is shot. At
least around here. I can find decent sized horizontal units (5hp) any
day of the week for $100(most are old dairy system compressors). But
I have yet to find a vertical for less than $200, even with a blown
compressor.
I would like to find a good vertical tank, but at this point I have
given up the floor space for my horizontal so it doesn't really matter
anymore.
JW
We decided against purchasing this compressor - amounted to too much $$$ for
a 40+ year old machine with limited parts availability.
Any thoughts on new compressors, like the ones from Harbor Freight or Eaton
Compressor?
Carla
Energizer Bunny arrested - charged with battery.
Unless I missed it, the first question that the group usually asks
is what are your needs in an air compressor. Just filling tires,
sandblasting, or air tools? Future needs?
I have one large compressor that 90% of the time is an overkill.
But it only has to run once in a while, so I consider it quiet.
I also have a very small portable one that doesn't get used much.
It's used on rare occasions need to fill a tire or blow off a part.
Storage size and portability for that one was more important.
Wayne D.
|