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-   -   Is this compressor worth anything? (https://www.diybanter.com/metalworking/332061-compressor-worth-anything.html)

Tim Wescott November 21st 11 06:51 AM

Is this compressor worth anything?
 
More accurately: would it be worth anything if it's not broken, worn out,
or otherwise trashed, and how likely is it to have problems that won't
show up immediately?

Nameplate says "Emerson". I'd be using it mostly for filling tires and
painting model airplanes.

http://portland.craigslist.org/clc/tls/2700954509.html

--
www.wescottdesign.com

Winston November 21st 11 07:19 AM

Is this compressor worth anything?
 
Tim Wescott wrote:
More accurately: would it be worth anything if it's not broken, worn out,
or otherwise trashed, and how likely is it to have problems that won't
show up immediately?

Nameplate says "Emerson". I'd be using it mostly for filling tires and
painting model airplanes.


Offer this guy 50 smackers for his Quincy:
http://portland.craigslist.org/clc/tls/2712497825.html
Replace the motor with a 2 HP 1 phase and be
happy for a long, long time, would be my advice.

--Winston

Tim Wescott November 21st 11 07:45 AM

Is this compressor worth anything?
 
On Sun, 20 Nov 2011 23:19:21 -0800, Winston wrote:

Tim Wescott wrote:
More accurately: would it be worth anything if it's not broken, worn
out, or otherwise trashed, and how likely is it to have problems that
won't show up immediately?

Nameplate says "Emerson". I'd be using it mostly for filling tires and
painting model airplanes.


Offer this guy 50 smackers for his Quincy:
http://portland.craigslist.org/clc/tls/2712497825.html Replace the motor
with a 2 HP 1 phase and be happy for a long, long time, would be my
advice.


$50 is actually pushing the "play" budget a bit, it's just that I'm
getting damn tired of rattle-can paint jobs. So $50 + a motor is a bit
hard to swing, unless I can trade the 3-phase motor for a 2-phase, or
unless there's a _cheap_ and reliable way to cobble it up with start caps
and run at reduced HP.

I was looking at this, too, but without knowing where it's been it's hard
to know:

http://portland.craigslist.org/clc/tls/2709025964.html

--
www.wescottdesign.com

Steve W.[_2_] November 21st 11 08:36 AM

Is this compressor worth anything?
 
Tim Wescott wrote:
More accurately: would it be worth anything if it's not broken, worn out,
or otherwise trashed, and how likely is it to have problems that won't
show up immediately?

Nameplate says "Emerson". I'd be using it mostly for filling tires and
painting model airplanes.

http://portland.craigslist.org/clc/tls/2700954509.html


That looks like a dentists compressor.

--
Steve W.

Gunner Asch[_6_] November 21st 11 10:30 AM

Is this compressor worth anything?
 
On Sun, 20 Nov 2011 23:19:21 -0800, Winston
wrote:

Tim Wescott wrote:
More accurately: would it be worth anything if it's not broken, worn out,
or otherwise trashed, and how likely is it to have problems that won't
show up immediately?

Nameplate says "Emerson". I'd be using it mostly for filling tires and
painting model airplanes.


Offer this guy 50 smackers for his Quincy:
http://portland.craigslist.org/clc/tls/2712497825.html
Replace the motor with a 2 HP 1 phase and be
happy for a long, long time, would be my advice.

--Winston



Im not terribly sure a 2hp motor will turn that compressor. It would be
rough for a 5hp pulley'd down.

The Emerson is older than dirt and is very very small, but they were
fairly rugged, and for the task..that would do just fine assuming the
pump was still ok. If the motor dies..it may not be easy finding a
replacement.

If you cant talk him down from $50...it would be ok for your usage

I gave a very similar one away not long ago that was about the same
size. Guy is using it for..tires and RC car painting G..works fine for
him.

Gunner

One could not be a successful Leftwinger without realizing that,
in contrast to the popular conception supported by newspapers
and mothers of Leftwingers, a goodly number of Leftwingers are
not only narrow-minded and dull, but also just stupid.
Gunner Asch

Gunner Asch[_6_] November 21st 11 10:32 AM

Is this compressor worth anything?
 
On Mon, 21 Nov 2011 01:45:27 -0600, Tim Wescott
wrote:

On Sun, 20 Nov 2011 23:19:21 -0800, Winston wrote:

Tim Wescott wrote:
More accurately: would it be worth anything if it's not broken, worn
out, or otherwise trashed, and how likely is it to have problems that
won't show up immediately?

Nameplate says "Emerson". I'd be using it mostly for filling tires and
painting model airplanes.


Offer this guy 50 smackers for his Quincy:
http://portland.craigslist.org/clc/tls/2712497825.html Replace the motor
with a 2 HP 1 phase and be happy for a long, long time, would be my
advice.


$50 is actually pushing the "play" budget a bit, it's just that I'm
getting damn tired of rattle-can paint jobs. So $50 + a motor is a bit
hard to swing, unless I can trade the 3-phase motor for a 2-phase, or
unless there's a _cheap_ and reliable way to cobble it up with start caps
and run at reduced HP.

I was looking at this, too, but without knowing where it's been it's hard
to know:

http://portland.craigslist.org/clc/tls/2709025964.html


The second one is bigger, but has NO guarding on it. So if you have kids
or grandkids or kittens/puppies ..one would have to be very careful
about using it with them around. And given its condition..one wonders
about valves and rings.


One could not be a successful Leftwinger without realizing that,
in contrast to the popular conception supported by newspapers
and mothers of Leftwingers, a goodly number of Leftwingers are
not only narrow-minded and dull, but also just stupid.
Gunner Asch

Dennis November 21st 11 12:05 PM

Is this compressor worth anything?
 

"Tim Wescott" wrote in message
...
More accurately: would it be worth anything if it's not broken, worn out,
or otherwise trashed, and how likely is it to have problems that won't
show up immediately?

Nameplate says "Emerson". I'd be using it mostly for filling tires and
painting model airplanes.

http://portland.craigslist.org/clc/tls/2700954509.html

--
www.wescottdesign.com



Look at some of the very small compressors from the cheap auto places and
use an old Propane tank for a resrvoir?





mike[_12_] November 21st 11 01:16 PM

Is this compressor worth anything?
 
On Nov 21, 1:51*am, Tim Wescott wrote:
More accurately: would it be worth anything if it's not broken, worn out,
or otherwise trashed, and how likely is it to have problems that won't
show up immediately?

Nameplate says "Emerson". *I'd be using it mostly for filling tires and
painting model airplanes.

http://portland.craigslist.org/clc/tls/2700954509.html

--www.wescottdesign.com


I've picked up several compressor motors of that style that were not
putting out much air until
the head had been removed and the reed valves cleaned, didn't need any
new parts and aren't
real complicated, just be sure to reassemble correctly (hopefully
some one else has been there
already and mis-assembled it).

Just a tip - if you go to look at it, pick it up off the ground a
little bit and kind of wobble it back
and forth, if it seems half full of water that may give you a clue as
to whether to get it, or a
bargaining point if it feels like it's got water in it.

Ignoramus19887 November 21st 11 01:19 PM

Is this compressor worth anything?
 
On 2011-11-21, Winston wrote:
Tim Wescott wrote:
More accurately: would it be worth anything if it's not broken, worn out,
or otherwise trashed, and how likely is it to have problems that won't
show up immediately?

Nameplate says "Emerson". I'd be using it mostly for filling tires and
painting model airplanes.


Offer this guy 50 smackers for his Quincy:
http://portland.craigslist.org/clc/tls/2712497825.html
Replace the motor with a 2 HP 1 phase and be
happy for a long, long time, would be my advice.


Very funny!

I have a 10 HP Quincy and I paid $200 for it.

i

Dennis November 21st 11 01:24 PM

Is this compressor worth anything?
 

"mike" wrote in message
...
On Nov 21, 1:51 am, Tim Wescott wrote:
More accurately: would it be worth anything if it's not broken, worn out,
or otherwise trashed, and how likely is it to have problems that won't
show up immediately?

Nameplate says "Emerson". I'd be using it mostly for filling tires and
painting model airplanes.

http://portland.craigslist.org/clc/tls/2700954509.html

--www.wescottdesign.com


I've picked up several compressor motors of that style that were not
putting out much air until
the head had been removed and the reed valves cleaned, didn't need any
new parts and aren't
real complicated, just be sure to reassemble correctly (hopefully
some one else has been there
already and mis-assembled it).

Just a tip - if you go to look at it, pick it up off the ground a
little bit and kind of wobble it back
and forth, if it seems half full of water that may give you a clue as
to whether to get it, or a
bargaining point if it feels like it's got water in it.

================================================== ===============

I picked a nice clean unit (probably less than 12 months old) from the hard
junk verge collection a few months back.

I pressed the reset button on the motor & away it went. Runs fine!



mike[_12_] November 21st 11 01:42 PM

Is this compressor worth anything?
 


mike wrote:
Oops, that should read 'not mis-assembled it'

real complicated, just be sure to reassemble correctly (hopefully
some one else has been there
already and mis-assembled it).


Bruce L. Bergman (munged human readable) November 21st 11 04:41 PM

Is this compressor worth anything?
 
On Mon, 21 Nov 2011 00:51:27 -0600, Tim Wescott
wrote:

More accurately: would it be worth anything if it's not broken, worn out,
or otherwise trashed, and how likely is it to have problems that won't
show up immediately?

Nameplate says "Emerson". I'd be using it mostly for filling tires and
painting model airplanes.

http://portland.craigslist.org/clc/tls/2700954509.html


It's a nice little wobble-piston oilless that should be plenty for a
homeowner. You can get parts for it if you need to, the head is
either Gast or Thomas or Speedaire. And check the tank for signs of
huge rust or pinholes - you don't patch leaking and rusted-out
pressure vessels, you replace them. (Or try to sell them off to
someone else.)

Forget the big 10-HP 3-Ph unless you're planning to work on cars and
need that much air - you would need at least a 7-1/2 HP single-phase
motor and a sheave change to use it at a residence - or a rotary phase
converter. Forget a static, they don't put out enough power.

And the third one looks Real Rough. Wouldn't even think about it
unless it's hooked up and running.

-- Bruce --

Tim Wescott November 21st 11 06:53 PM

Is this compressor worth anything?
 
On Mon, 21 Nov 2011 02:32:53 -0800, Gunner Asch wrote:

On Mon, 21 Nov 2011 01:45:27 -0600, Tim Wescott
wrote:

On Sun, 20 Nov 2011 23:19:21 -0800, Winston wrote:

Tim Wescott wrote:
More accurately: would it be worth anything if it's not broken, worn
out, or otherwise trashed, and how likely is it to have problems that
won't show up immediately?

Nameplate says "Emerson". I'd be using it mostly for filling tires
and painting model airplanes.

Offer this guy 50 smackers for his Quincy:
http://portland.craigslist.org/clc/tls/2712497825.html Replace the
motor with a 2 HP 1 phase and be happy for a long, long time, would be
my advice.


$50 is actually pushing the "play" budget a bit, it's just that I'm
getting damn tired of rattle-can paint jobs. So $50 + a motor is a bit
hard to swing, unless I can trade the 3-phase motor for a 2-phase, or
unless there's a _cheap_ and reliable way to cobble it up with start
caps and run at reduced HP.

I was looking at this, too, but without knowing where it's been it's
hard to know:

http://portland.craigslist.org/clc/tls/2709025964.html


The second one is bigger, but has NO guarding on it. So if you have kids
or grandkids or kittens/puppies ..one would have to be very careful
about using it with them around. And given its condition..one wonders
about valves and rings.


This one certainly wondered about valves and rings!!

And I hadn't noticed the lack of guards, but that's a good point. It
could be retrofit -- at the cost of time I'd rather spend doing other
things.

--
www.wescottdesign.com

Winston November 21st 11 07:11 PM

Is this compressor worth anything?
 
Tim Wescott wrote:

(...)

$50 is actually pushing the "play" budget a bit, it's just that I'm
getting damn tired of rattle-can paint jobs. So $50 + a motor is a bit
hard to swing, unless I can trade the 3-phase motor for a 2-phase, or
unless there's a _cheap_ and reliable way to cobble it up with start caps
and run at reduced HP.


We all need to think more like Iggy, Tim:

Iggy: Very funny!
Iggy:
Iggy: I have a 10 HP Quincy and I paid $200 for it.

The real answer is to buy the Quincy for $50:

1) Invest some sweat equity to clean it up and test it.
2) Offer it on eBay for say $1500:
http://www.ebay.com/itm/250817510391
http://www.ebay.com/itm/160684112073
3) Buy a few decent compressors with the profits.


--Winston

Stormin Mormon November 22nd 11 01:39 AM

Is this compressor worth anything?
 
From the looks of that, appears to be an oilless. I'd be
tempted to take that same $50 and go buy one at Harbor
Freight, and get a warranty. I have their three gallon
pancace compressor. I think it's $80 retail, and it's
usually on sale. I use it for airing up tires, once in a
while. With the regulator, I also used it to air up the
sports balls at church. And, on full blast, it can be used
to blow dust out of condensors for refrigerated equipment.
The blow gun, hose, etc, cost me another $25 or so.

--
Christopher A. Young
Learn more about Jesus
www.lds.org
..


"Tim Wescott" wrote in message
...
More accurately: would it be worth anything if it's not
broken, worn out,
or otherwise trashed, and how likely is it to have problems
that won't
show up immediately?

Nameplate says "Emerson". I'd be using it mostly for
filling tires and
painting model airplanes.

http://portland.craigslist.org/clc/tls/2700954509.html

--
www.wescottdesign.com



DoN. Nichols[_2_] November 22nd 11 02:35 AM

Is this compressor worth anything?
 
On 2011-11-21, Dennis wrote:

"Tim Wescott" wrote in message
...
More accurately: would it be worth anything if it's not broken, worn out,
or otherwise trashed, and how likely is it to have problems that won't
show up immediately?

Nameplate says "Emerson". I'd be using it mostly for filling tires and
painting model airplanes.

http://portland.craigslist.org/clc/tls/2700954509.html

--
www.wescottdesign.com



Look at some of the very small compressors from the cheap auto places and
use an old Propane tank for a resrvoir?


And spend the price difference for earplugs. :-) Good belt
driven compressors are *much* quieter in operation than the oil-free
ones.

Unless you mean the really small ones designed to pug into the
cigarette lighter socket (if you still have one) to refill tires on the
road. And those take forever to move much air. Totally useless for
painting. :-)

Enjoy,
DoN.

--
Remove oil spill source from e-mail
Email: | Voice (all times): (703) 938-4564
(too) near Washington D.C. | http://www.d-and-d.com/dnichols/DoN.html
--- Black Holes are where God is dividing by zero ---

Ignoramus19887 November 22nd 11 03:52 AM

Is this compressor worth anything?
 
On 2011-11-21, Winston wrote:
Tim Wescott wrote:

(...)

$50 is actually pushing the "play" budget a bit, it's just that I'm
getting damn tired of rattle-can paint jobs. So $50 + a motor is a bit
hard to swing, unless I can trade the 3-phase motor for a 2-phase, or
unless there's a _cheap_ and reliable way to cobble it up with start caps
and run at reduced HP.


We all need to think more like Iggy, Tim:

Iggy: Very funny!


What I found funny is the idea of putting a 2 HP motor on a 10 HP
QUincy.

Iggy:
Iggy: I have a 10 HP Quincy and I paid $200 for it.

The real answer is to buy the Quincy for $50:

1) Invest some sweat equity to clean it up and test it.
2) Offer it on eBay for say $1500:
http://www.ebay.com/itm/250817510391
http://www.ebay.com/itm/160684112073
3) Buy a few decent compressors with the profits.


--Winston


yep...

Bill[_42_] November 22nd 11 04:52 AM

Is this compressor worth anything?
 
On 11/21/2011 7:52 PM, Ignoramus19887 wrote:
On 2011-11-21, wrote:
Tim Wescott wrote:

(...)

$50 is actually pushing the "play" budget a bit, it's just that I'm
getting damn tired of rattle-can paint jobs. So $50 + a motor is a bit
hard to swing, unless I can trade the 3-phase motor for a 2-phase, or
unless there's a _cheap_ and reliable way to cobble it up with start caps
and run at reduced HP.


We all need to think more like Iggy, Tim:

Iggy: Very funny!


What I found funny is the idea of putting a 2 HP motor on a 10 HP
QUincy.

Iggy:
Iggy: I have a 10 HP Quincy and I paid $200 for it.

The real answer is to buy the Quincy for $50:

1) Invest some sweat equity to clean it up and test it.
2) Offer it on eBay for say $1500:
http://www.ebay.com/itm/250817510391
http://www.ebay.com/itm/160684112073
3) Buy a few decent compressors with the profits.


--Winston


yep...



actually, if you put a 1/4 HP motor on it (with proper reduction) you
would have a much better compressor than one of those buzzy little
things - in fact a old "free' washing machine motor will run it just
fine, just well below capacity - that will be a very efficient
(thermodynamically) compressor


Winston November 22nd 11 05:09 AM

Is this compressor worth anything?
 
Ignoramus19887 wrote:
On 2011-11-21, wrote:


(...)

We all need to think more like Iggy, Tim:

Iggy: Very funny!


What I found funny is the idea of putting a 2 HP motor on a 10 HP
QUincy.


He needed 40 PSI. That would have done it all day, all night.
Even if it required a jack-shaft to adjust for lower
RPM at sufficient torque:
http://209.85.48.9/2428/142/upload/p3275451.jpg

Iggy:
Iggy: I have a 10 HP Quincy and I paid $200 for it.

The real answer is to buy the Quincy for $50:

1) Invest some sweat equity to clean it up and test it.
2) Offer it on eBay for say $1500:
http://www.ebay.com/itm/250817510391
http://www.ebay.com/itm/160684112073
3) Buy a few decent compressors with the profits.


--Winston


yep...


I like the second idea better too.

--Winston

Winston November 22nd 11 05:10 AM

Is this compressor worth anything?
 
Bill wrote:

(...)

actually, if you put a 1/4 HP motor on it (with proper reduction) you
would have a much better compressor than one of those buzzy little
things - in fact a old "free' washing machine motor will run it just
fine, just well below capacity - that will be a very efficient
(thermodynamically) compressor


Quiet, too.

--Winston


Dennis November 22nd 11 06:34 AM

Is this compressor worth anything?
 

"DoN. Nichols" wrote in message
...
On 2011-11-21, Dennis wrote:

"Tim Wescott" wrote in message
...
More accurately: would it be worth anything if it's not broken, worn
out,
or otherwise trashed, and how likely is it to have problems that won't
show up immediately?

Nameplate says "Emerson". I'd be using it mostly for filling tires and
painting model airplanes.

http://portland.craigslist.org/clc/tls/2700954509.html

--
www.wescottdesign.com



Look at some of the very small compressors from the cheap auto places and
use an old Propane tank for a resrvoir?


And spend the price difference for earplugs. :-) Good belt
driven compressors are *much* quieter in operation than the oil-free
ones.

Unless you mean the really small ones designed to pug into the
cigarette lighter socket (if you still have one) to refill tires on the
road. And those take forever to move much air. Totally useless for
painting. :-)

Enjoy,
DoN.

--
Remove oil spill source from e-mail
Email: | Voice (all times): (703) 938-4564
(too) near Washington D.C. |
http://www.d-and-d.com/dnichols/DoN.html
--- Black Holes are where God is dividing by zero ---




They are certainly noisy - Once I forgot to turn mine off at the power
point, I'm sure the neighbors were impressed with it coming on at 3am when
the air leaked down. Had to drag myself out of bed to shut if off.

I was thinking of the small ones for running airbrushes. Your'e right about
the tyre compressors - all pressure and no volume.



Ignoramus8003 November 22nd 11 05:55 PM

Is this compressor worth anything?
 
On 2011-11-22, Dennis wrote:

"DoN. Nichols" wrote in message
...
On 2011-11-21, Dennis wrote:

"Tim Wescott" wrote in message
...
More accurately: would it be worth anything if it's not broken, worn
out,
or otherwise trashed, and how likely is it to have problems that won't
show up immediately?

Nameplate says "Emerson". I'd be using it mostly for filling tires and
painting model airplanes.

http://portland.craigslist.org/clc/tls/2700954509.html



Look at some of the very small compressors from the cheap auto places and
use an old Propane tank for a resrvoir?


And spend the price difference for earplugs. :-) Good belt
driven compressors are *much* quieter in operation than the oil-free
ones.

Unless you mean the really small ones designed to pug into the
cigarette lighter socket (if you still have one) to refill tires on the
road. And those take forever to move much air. Totally useless for
painting. :-)

Enjoy,
DoN.




They are certainly noisy - Once I forgot to turn mine off at the power
point, I'm sure the neighbors were impressed with it coming on at 3am when
the air leaked down. Had to drag myself out of bed to shut if off.

I was thinking of the small ones for running airbrushes. Your'e right about
the tyre compressors - all pressure and no volume.



A 10 HP Quincy compressor is no less noisy.

i

Winston November 22nd 11 08:01 PM

Is this compressor worth anything?
 
Ignoramus8003 wrote:

(...)

A 10 HP Quincy compressor is no less noisy.


At 350 RPM, the Quincy would be quieter.
Cleaned and sold, it would be *much* quieter. :)

--Winston

Winston November 22nd 11 08:05 PM

Is this compressor worth anything?
 
Dennis wrote:

(...)

I was thinking of the small ones for running airbrushes. Your'e right about
the tyre compressors - all pressure and no volume.


Refrigerator compressors are very quiet.
http://www.airbrushtech.info/AIRBRUS...p/t-13477.html

I wouldn't attempt to inflate a tire with one, though
it'd be excellent for airbrush use, with proper filtering.

--Winston

Lloyd E. Sponenburgh[_3_] November 22nd 11 08:18 PM

Is this compressor worth anything?
 
Winston fired this volley in
:

I wouldn't attempt to inflate a tire with one, though
it'd be excellent for airbrush use, with proper filtering.


It would work fine, if you had the time! G

LLoyd

Winston November 22nd 11 08:25 PM

Is this compressor worth anything?
 
Lloyd E. Sponenburgh wrote:
fired this volley in
:

I wouldn't attempt to inflate a tire with one, though
it'd be excellent for airbrush use, with proper filtering.


It would work fine, if you had the time!G


Yeah, but as another grouper posted:
"I don't even buy my bananas green any more".

:)

--Winston

Bob Engelhardt November 22nd 11 10:30 PM

Is this compressor worth anything?
 
Winston wrote:
Refrigerator compressors are very quiet.

....
I wouldn't attempt to inflate a tire with one, ...


I made a mini compressor using a dorm-room refrigerator compressor and a
5lb (1 gal) propane tank. I keep it in the shed and use it for
inflating garden equipment tires. The 1 gal tank is enough that I don't
have to wait for the compressor. Weighs maybe 15 - 20 lbs. I didn't
even use a pressure switch - I just turn it off when a 60 psi pop-off
valve vents.

Beats the **** out of a hand pump G.

Bob


Winston November 22nd 11 10:46 PM

Is this compressor worth anything?
 
Bob Engelhardt wrote:
Winston wrote:
Refrigerator compressors are very quiet.

...
I wouldn't attempt to inflate a tire with one, ...


I made a mini compressor using a dorm-room refrigerator compressor and a
5lb (1 gal) propane tank.


Cheater. :)

I keep it in the shed and use it for inflating
garden equipment tires. The 1 gal tank is enough that I don't have to
wait for the compressor. Weighs maybe 15 - 20 lbs. I didn't even use a
pressure switch - I just turn it off when a 60 psi pop-off valve vents.

Beats the **** out of a hand pump G.


No doubt.

--Winston

Stormin Mormon November 22nd 11 10:55 PM

Is this compressor worth anything?
 
I do refrigeration, and HVAC work. I've used refrigerator
compressors for inflating tires, and airing up expansion
tanks. They work fine. A bit slow, but they do work. Some
times, the compressor won't start if there is a lot of back
pressure in the discharge line. If the compressor is
properly upright, very little oil gets into the air. And the
water separator should take care of that.

Just for fun, one time I brazed a fitting onto the discharge
line of a compressor I took out of a refrigerated
merchandiser. Piped it to the high side of my gages. I got
up to 400 PSI before I chickend out and pulled the plug. The
SCFM isn't great. But, you can turn the compressor on long
before the job, and fill a huge expansion tank.

The lube oil is essential. However, it's often possible to
drain the refrigerator oil that absorbs moisture from the
air. Put in the same volume of ND-30, which works a lot
longer.

--
Christopher A. Young
Learn more about Jesus
www.lds.org
..


"Winston" wrote in message
...


Refrigerator compressors are very quiet.
http://www.airbrushtech.info/AIRBRUS...p/t-13477.html

I wouldn't attempt to inflate a tire with one, though
it'd be excellent for airbrush use, with proper filtering.

--Winston



Stormin Mormon November 22nd 11 10:56 PM

Is this compressor worth anything?
 
I use an old refrig compressor to top off the tires on my
work van (45 PSI, they are 235x75 R15 tires, at 45 PSI).
Works fine.

--
Christopher A. Young
Learn more about Jesus
www.lds.org
..


"Lloyd E. Sponenburgh" lloydspinsidemindspring.com wrote
in message
. 3.70...

I wouldn't attempt to inflate a tire with one, though
it'd be excellent for airbrush use, with proper filtering.


It would work fine, if you had the time! G

LLoyd



Stormin Mormon November 22nd 11 10:58 PM

Is this compressor worth anything?
 
Back when men were men, they used to sell
freon tank conversions. I used to use those,
and they are good.

The propane tank should do just fine. And,
better than the hand pump. You can give it a
quick blast, to seat a bead.

--
Christopher A. Young
Learn more about Jesus
www.lds.org
..


"Bob Engelhardt" wrote in
message ...

I made a mini compressor using a dorm-room
refrigerator compressor and a 5lb (1 gal) propane
tank. I keep it in the shed and use it for inflating
garden equipment tires. The 1 gal tank is enough
that I don't have to wait for the compressor.
Weighs maybe 15 - 20 lbs. I didn't even use a
pressure switch - I just turn it off when a 60 psi pop-off
valve vents.

Beats the **** out of a hand pump G.

Bob



Lloyd E. Sponenburgh[_3_] November 22nd 11 11:27 PM

Is this compressor worth anything?
 
"Stormin Mormon" fired this volley in
:

The propane tank should do just fine. And,
better than the hand pump. You can give it a
quick blast, to seat a bead.


A propane tank IS fine. Check the pressure of LP at 100F.

I have a 5HP vertical compressor built around a (fully zinc'd) buriable LP
tank (100 gal).

LLoyd

Ignoramus8003 November 23rd 11 03:43 AM

Is this compressor worth anything?
 
On 2011-11-23, Winston wrote:
Ignoramus8003 wrote:
On 2011-11-22, wrote:
Ignoramus8003 wrote:

(...)

A 10 HP Quincy compressor is no less noisy.

At 350 RPM, the Quincy would be quieter.
Cleaned and sold, it would be *much* quieter. :)

--Winston


I do not think that it will work well. At 2 HP, a 10 HP Quincy will be
running at about 4x less than the MINIMUM recommended speed. I think
that it will not even br properly lubricated.


It uses a positive displacement pump for lubrication.
I found this on your site:
http://igor.chudov.com/manuals/Quinc...r-Brochure.pdf

If one accepts say 5 x less CFM than stock, it'd
probably work just fine. Seven CFM is plenty for
inflating tires, especially with that ~100 gallon
receiver. :)

--Winston -- Quincy could offer a '5 lifetime' guarantee!


If anyone was serious about putting a 2 HP motor on a 10HP Quincy, I
would call Quincy and ask them. They will probably give the right
answer.

i

Winston November 23rd 11 05:50 AM

Is this compressor worth anything?
 
Gunner Asch wrote:
On Sun, 20 Nov 2011 23:19:21 -0800,
wrote:

Tim Wescott wrote:
More accurately: would it be worth anything if it's not broken, worn out,
or otherwise trashed, and how likely is it to have problems that won't
show up immediately?

Nameplate says "Emerson". I'd be using it mostly for filling tires and
painting model airplanes.


Offer this guy 50 smackers for his Quincy:
http://portland.craigslist.org/clc/tls/2712497825.html
Replace the motor with a 2 HP 1 phase and be
happy for a long, long time, would be my advice.

--Winston



Im not terribly sure a 2hp motor will turn that compressor. It would be
rough for a 5hp pulley'd down.


Put a 5:1 jack shaft on it. It would work just fine.

But as I mentioned, first prize would be to just clean
it up and sell it for huge money.

--Winston

Winston November 23rd 11 05:52 AM

Is this compressor worth anything?
 
Ignoramus8003 wrote:
On 2011-11-23, wrote:
Ignoramus8003 wrote:
On 2011-11-22, wrote:
Ignoramus8003 wrote:

(...)

A 10 HP Quincy compressor is no less noisy.

At 350 RPM, the Quincy would be quieter.
Cleaned and sold, it would be *much* quieter. :)

--Winston

I do not think that it will work well. At 2 HP, a 10 HP Quincy will be
running at about 4x less than the MINIMUM recommended speed. I think
that it will not even br properly lubricated.


It uses a positive displacement pump for lubrication.
I found this on your site:
http://igor.chudov.com/manuals/Quinc...r-Brochure.pdf

If one accepts say 5 x less CFM than stock, it'd
probably work just fine. Seven CFM is plenty for
inflating tires, especially with that ~100 gallon
receiver. :)

--Winston-- Quincy could offer a '5 lifetime' guarantee!


If anyone was serious about putting a 2 HP motor on a 10HP Quincy, I
would call Quincy and ask them. They will probably give the right
answer.


I've decided the right answer is to clean it,
test it and sell it for huge money. :)

--Winston

RogerN November 23rd 11 10:36 AM

Is this compressor worth anything?
 

I don't know much about that compressor but I can tell you about my budget
compressor, it may give you some ideas.

About 30 years ago I went to an auction of an old service station with a lot
of junk. They had an old 2 cylinder Freon compressor welded to a frame,
motor was gone. I bought it for $7.50, cleaned out layers of paint in the
intake (no filter), opened it up, looked OK inside. I purchased a wal-mart
air tank for $30 and enough fittings to connect the compressor to the tank.
A friend sold me a 3/4 HP single phase motor for around $5 or $10. The
budget went over $50 but I was able to build it a little at a time. Bought
a pressure switch and regulator. Nice thing is I can pump it up, disconnect
it and still use as a portable air tank.

If it were me I'd take a look at the compressor, may serve you fine for
years, whatever gives out, compressor, motor, tank rust,... may not take a
lot to keep it running for years of service. My old compressor that I got
30 years ago still works fine as of the last time I tried it.

RogerN



Stormin Mormon November 23rd 11 01:37 PM

Is this compressor worth anything?
 
Sounds like you did good. A real machinist, building tools
as you go.

Please look for an oil sight glass, and drain plug. The old
lube oil they used to use absorbs water from the air.
Replace the lube oil with ND-30 if you have the time,
energy, and interest.

--
Christopher A. Young
Learn more about Jesus
www.lds.org
..


"RogerN" wrote in message
m...

I don't know much about that compressor but I can tell you
about my budget
compressor, it may give you some ideas.

About 30 years ago I went to an auction of an old service
station with a lot
of junk. They had an old 2 cylinder Freon compressor welded
to a frame,
motor was gone. I bought it for $7.50, cleaned out layers
of paint in the
intake (no filter), opened it up, looked OK inside. I
purchased a wal-mart
air tank for $30 and enough fittings to connect the
compressor to the tank.
A friend sold me a 3/4 HP single phase motor for around $5
or $10. The
budget went over $50 but I was able to build it a little at
a time. Bought
a pressure switch and regulator. Nice thing is I can pump
it up, disconnect
it and still use as a portable air tank.

If it were me I'd take a look at the compressor, may serve
you fine for
years, whatever gives out, compressor, motor, tank rust,...
may not take a
lot to keep it running for years of service. My old
compressor that I got
30 years ago still works fine as of the last time I tried
it.

RogerN




Gerald Miller November 24th 11 12:50 AM

Is this compressor worth anything?
 
On Wed, 23 Nov 2011 08:37:47 -0500, "Stormin Mormon"
wrote:

Sounds like you did good. A real machinist, building tools
as you go.

Please look for an oil sight glass, and drain plug. The old
lube oil they used to use absorbs water from the air.
Replace the lube oil with ND-30 if you have the time,
energy, and interest.

First thing I did with my little GD head that I bought for $3 was to
dump the contents of the crank case (7 oz. water, 7 oz. sludge and 2
oz. of oily substance) and thoroughly wash it out with gasoline. Then
I filled it to the fill plug with compressor oil. I have yet to see
any indication of oil loss or water contamination.
Gerry :-)}
London, Canada

Winston November 24th 11 04:21 AM

Is this compressor worth anything?
 
Gerald Miller wrote:
On Wed, 23 Nov 2011 08:37:47 -0500, "Stormin Mormon"
wrote:

Sounds like you did good. A real machinist, building tools
as you go.

Please look for an oil sight glass, and drain plug. The old
lube oil they used to use absorbs water from the air.
Replace the lube oil with ND-30 if you have the time,
energy, and interest.

First thing I did with my little GD head that I bought for $3 was to
dump the contents of the crank case (7 oz. water, 7 oz. sludge and 2
oz. of oily substance) and thoroughly wash it out with gasoline. Then
I filled it to the fill plug with compressor oil. I have yet to see
any indication of oil loss or water contamination.
Gerry :-)}
London, Canada


One RCM Attaboy, Gerry!

--Winston

Larry Jaques[_4_] November 25th 11 10:45 PM

Is this compressor worth anything?
 
On Tue, 22 Nov 2011 16:26:40 -0800, Winston
wrote:

Jon Elson wrote:
On 11/21/2011 11:10 PM, Winston wrote:
Bill wrote:

(...)

actually, if you put a 1/4 HP motor on it (with proper reduction) you
would have a much better compressor than one of those buzzy little
things - in fact a old "free' washing machine motor will run it just
fine, just well below capacity - that will be a very efficient
(thermodynamically) compressor

Quiet, too.

--Winston


Curiously, my Quincy got QUIETER when I upped the motor. It came with
a continuously-on motor and pneumatic unloader, and a 1 Hp motor. The
pulleys were set for something like 450 RPM.
I got a 2 Hp motor and changed the motor pulley to get 915 RPM and
rigged controller to use both unload and motor start/stop as the demand
required. The surprise is the compressor was quiter at 900 RPM than 450.
My guess is the intake valves were pulsating at 450 but go full
open at 900.


'Could also be a 'resonance' thing.


It probably depends on the preferred RPM of the compressor in
question, too. I'm sure Jon checked that out before upping it.

P.S: Did you see me wave on Monday when I got to NorCal? I was looking
your direction from me Mum's in Vallejo. I had a nice buuuuuuuuurp
Tanksgivin wit fambly.

--
Happiness is not a station you arrive at, but a manner of traveling.
-- Margaret Lee Runbeck


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