I have a 2 1/2 gallon electric water heater in my shop that supplies enough for washing hands/ cleaning up a bit. It is 120v but recovers well. It was cheap, is not as complicated as a point of use (with flow sensors Ect...), and fits under the slop sink.
I have had these Craftsman reversible for years and they have always worked perfectly.
https://www.acehardware.com/departments/tools/hand-tools/solid-joint-pliers/2298826
I bought my big Ridgid shop vac the day I closed on my first house in 2003. I have remodeled 2 houses since then plus a ton of vacuuming in the shop and am still using my original filter. I just tap it on the ground when dumping the bin.
I have a similar compressor and had almost the same thing happen 4 years ago. My leak was at the tube from the compressor that connected to the valve body with a 3/8 compression fitting that was not tightened all the way. Mine had the same symptoms as yours I’ll take a pic when I go out there later.
I bought one of these last year for the deal price. I will say I love the ladder! It is super stable, and definitely a quality piece. I have never owned another adjustable ladder so I have no comparison.
I have the straight clip nailed (don't remember the gauge) and it performs flawlessly every time. I use it on all sorts of trim work and wood projects. Buy it and don't look back!
Those are house chambers (whole house water hammer arrestors) Usually 24" tall and installed on the highest floor of the system. You do not want any pipe to be able to move as this can cause fatigue, the air is all shock absorption needed. All air chambers will become waterlogged, they suggest...
I have had more than one customer that have had water powered backup pumps that could not keep up with the incoming water, even with 60 psi of city water pressure.