Well... hmmm...
Got her wired right. Closed my eyes and flipped the switch. She rolled right on and made a nice, vintage pump popping hum. Things seemed to be working just fine. It takes my IR compressor about 13-14 mins to fill up the 60 gallon tank. I didn't have a stop watch, but it seemed to take about 11 mins for the ol' Quincy to fill up this 80 gallon tank.
Problem #1:
I'm not sure why the compressor shop didn't tell me about the giant hole in the neck of the cooling tube?!?!? Grr!! Once she kicked off at just north of 150psi, all I could hear was the sound of a big air leak. I traced it to the neck of the finned cooling tube.
What's in that tube? Oil, right? If I pull the wheel (sheave?) off and remove the tube, am I going to dump oil everywhere? Do I need to drain it first? Or does the oil drain back to the bottom?
Any chance this is a fairly common, replaceable Quincy part that might be shared with the 325's more common 335 brother? Or, might I be able to solder the holes and get back to business?
Problem #2
I let it bleed down to see what happens when she kicks back on. Right about 120, the old Baldor tried to turn her over, but couldn't find enough torque to accomplish that. I heard a locked-up buzzing sort of sound. After about 6-8 seconds of that, the breaker popped.
I tried turning it over with my hands and nothing doin'. I could turn it over a little bit, but not enough to get over the hump.
So, does that mean I need some massive 7.5hp motor to overcome the "compression resistance" (my made-up term) on the pump? I can't imagine I'd need something that massive for this small of a compressor.
Give me some guidance here guys.