All this right after I bought 4 sets of the Kobalt high flow aluminum fittings....
In my defense I had a box of air fittings collected over the years and half of them did not like the other half, most were old and beaten up. I figure now that I'm finally setting up a permanent big compressor I would setup proper fittings. I particularly like the ease of coupling and removal of these guys.
By the way the pack with the quick disconnect and 3 couplers is selling for $4.98 at lowes, $13.44 at Amazon, and $11~$16 on Fleabay.
I attempted to achieve 90 PSI to the 1/2" impact using two M style couplers with a 50 foot long 3/8" hose. Almost made it with a whopping 90 PSI pressure drop.
I think this is worth quoting.
The average air setup people run simply isn't capable of delivering 90psi dynamic. That's why people get all bent out of shape about under performing impact tools especially.
Very true. This is also why many switched to the European HiFLo style couplers and plugs. My main point is that they probably didn't need to.
The common M style 1/4" industrial plug with 3/16 orifice is capable of supporting the flow requirements if used with a non restrictive coupler.
No need to switch out all your plugs and couplers to the European HiFLo style.
Quick product question here:
I have your quiet plugs on lead hoses for my air hammers, very happy there. But my impacts have fittings straight into the tool, coupler is on the air hose.
If I use the Stedlin coupler, with a normal steel fitting connected straight into an impact, will it cause wear issues from vibration? I had an orbital with built in quiet plug on my impacting air ratchet, and found it wore when plugged into a normal steel/brass coupler.
Hmm crazy. Thats what i use. Its my favorite. Quiet and easy to change. My gun never lacks power.
I think the restriction is in the coupling not the plug. But I dont know. Lincoln rates the coupler at 45 cfm @ 100 psi and rates the plug at 55 cfm @ 100 psi.
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Im a test engineer, so I appreciate the efforts and documentation showing actual numbers. I have to wonder though...whats the significance of this?
If Im thinking of this right, then your tool should be able to do what it needs to do whether it has 150 or 95 psi on the upstream side of the coupler.
So whats the right test? Do we need more of an air hog tool connected to see if the more restrictive couplers can keep up? Maybe a cut off tool or sander with a tachometer to see how the speed changes? Do we need an impact gun with a load on it?
I dont have the answers. Im just trying to keep the discussion going. I wish we had more of this type of stuff posted on GJ. I dont want to Monday-morning quarterback the OP because I think hes been forthcoming and responsive to the feedback provided so far.
You should send your fittings to the guy doing all the torque tests on YouTube to see how it all compares at the end of a socket from a third party. Low-low / stedlin-low / stedlin-stedlin / high-high
But the plugs are the cheap part and will still give you a performance increase, perhaps not as big as the coupler but for the price it would be silly not to.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B077Y7P9PW/?tag=atomicindus08-20
But they work perfectly when used together. Which was my point, for $20 most people could outfit their whole shop

Go ahead and support the Chinese. I can't begin to compete on price alone which is why I take pride in producing better and more innovative products in the US.
22 PSI pressure drop through two M style couplers and plugs and a 25 foot long 3/8" hose while driving a 3/4" impact seems very low to me.
Could someone please suggest an air hog that is used with a 3/8" hose that I can test?
At this point I still don't get the need for HiFLo couplers.
The biggest air hog I can think of is a 9" 4-5 HP air grinder. I have an old ATSCO unit that drinks compressed air like there's no tomorrow. After that, a 1" impact wrench.
Hmm crazy. Thats what i use. Its my favorite. Quiet and easy to change. My gun never lacks power.
I think the restriction is in the coupling not the plug. But I dont know. Lincoln rates the coupler at 45 cfm @ 100 psi and rates the plug at 55 cfm @ 100 psi.
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What brand was the red coupler that you used and how do you know it wasn't hi flow? Also wondering why you didn't show results of the same test with Stedlin coupler & plug
What brand was the red coupler that you used and how do you know it wasn't hi flow? Also wondering why you didn't show results of the same test with Stedlin coupler & plug