Mr. Roboto
Well-known member
So I used to have a 60 gallon stationary Husky air compressor, hard wired in to 220V. I bought it brand new at a steal ($429). After 3 years, it started to give me issues. Because of how inaccessible it was (bolted to the floor in my garage, in the corner, surrounded by a bunch of other heavy stuff) I didn't get around to diagnosing it for almost a year. Long story short.... it was just the belt slipping. I replaced the belt, tensioned it up, and it worked fine. Yes, how silly of me.... oh well. Live and learn. During this year, I had just been using my 5 gallon pancake compressor to run my air tools. The price of compressors have gone up quite a bit, and it got me thinking how I really do not need such a large compressor, so it may be a good opportunity to cash in on selling this one. I threw the husky up on Facebook for $400 and it sold the next day, effectively getting my money back for what it cost me.
I only run my pneumatic impacts, air hammer, and if I am building something in the garage, my assortment of framing nailers/brad nailers. Plus the usual airing up of tires, floats, pools, balls etc.
Which brings me to the next question. What do I get for a replacement? I can't go back to an oilless unit because I don't want to listen to it. I like the idea of it being portable in case I ever need to use it outside the garage. And I want it to be vertical to take up less floor space. So, this puts me in the 20-30 gallon range.
I have been thinking about this Quincy:
www.northerntool.com
Anybody have any experience with it? Any recommendations on other units to get that may fit my uses? it seems like this question has been asked a lot, but I have not been able to find many providing first hand experience, or anyone looking to downsize like I am.
Thank you!
I only run my pneumatic impacts, air hammer, and if I am building something in the garage, my assortment of framing nailers/brad nailers. Plus the usual airing up of tires, floats, pools, balls etc.
Which brings me to the next question. What do I get for a replacement? I can't go back to an oilless unit because I don't want to listen to it. I like the idea of it being portable in case I ever need to use it outside the garage. And I want it to be vertical to take up less floor space. So, this puts me in the 20-30 gallon range.
I have been thinking about this Quincy:
Quincy Single-Stage Portable Electric Air Compressor 2 HP, 24-Gallon Vertical, 7.4 CFM, Model# Q12124VPQ | Northern Tool
Long-lasting Quincy Single-Stage 2 HP, 24-Gallon Vertical Portable Electric Air Compressor is perfect for light commercial ...
Anybody have any experience with it? Any recommendations on other units to get that may fit my uses? it seems like this question has been asked a lot, but I have not been able to find many providing first hand experience, or anyone looking to downsize like I am.
Thank you!
