nafterclifen
Well-known member
Paid $100 for a Sears 4hp 20 gallon air compressor a few months back. Made by Devilbiss in 1984. Appears to be all original. Got it home, cleaned it all up, changed the oil and tightened some fittings. Worked great, no leaks and was super happy with its output and noise coming from a 6 gallon pancake.
Unfortunately, the tank had a TON of water in it when I bought it. In hindsight, I should have walked away from it and not purchased it. Lesson learned. Because now a pinhole leak has developed. I'm NOT going to repair it. I've even stopped using the compressor. But I'm not willing to completely junk it.
I purchased a new 20 gallon tank and plan to mount the existing pump and motor onto it and I'm looking for ya'lls input. I do NOT want to weld ANYTHING.
My current thought is cut off the mounting plate from the old tank and bolt it to the handles of the new tank. Using some 90 degree fittings, I hope to extend the plumbing to a near original location which will allow to me re-use the existing plumbing, pressure switch, etc
What say you, almighty Garage Journalites?
PS - if you think I'm wasting my time replacing the tank and think I should just buy a new complete compressor, I challenge you to find one that puts out 7.7 scfm @ 90psi for less than $500. At the moment, I'm only into the compressor and new tank for $265.
Unfortunately, the tank had a TON of water in it when I bought it. In hindsight, I should have walked away from it and not purchased it. Lesson learned. Because now a pinhole leak has developed. I'm NOT going to repair it. I've even stopped using the compressor. But I'm not willing to completely junk it.
I purchased a new 20 gallon tank and plan to mount the existing pump and motor onto it and I'm looking for ya'lls input. I do NOT want to weld ANYTHING.
My current thought is cut off the mounting plate from the old tank and bolt it to the handles of the new tank. Using some 90 degree fittings, I hope to extend the plumbing to a near original location which will allow to me re-use the existing plumbing, pressure switch, etc
What say you, almighty Garage Journalites?
PS - if you think I'm wasting my time replacing the tank and think I should just buy a new complete compressor, I challenge you to find one that puts out 7.7 scfm @ 90psi for less than $500. At the moment, I'm only into the compressor and new tank for $265.

