i have a 60 gallon compressor, it is 3 hp, 11.5 cfm @40 psi 10.2 cfm @ 90 psi.
will adding a 15 gallon tank bump up the cfm or help keep the compressor from kicking on so much while painting?
. Otherwise one will come on before the other, up goes the pressure, and the second will never come on...
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To me this is the ideal situation. If one compressor will handle the load, no need to run the second. With each having their own pressure switch have one, for single stage systems, with a 100psi cut in and the second in the low 90's then the second will only cut-in if your nearing load critical minimum pressure say 90psi.
lg
no neat sig line
thats excactly what i was thinking. if only using normal amount of air, the second would never cut on. only when using high volume would the second kick on. sounds like a potential "winner" if ya ask me.
To me this is the ideal situation. If one compressor will handle the load, no need to run the second. With each having their own pressure switch have one, for single stage systems, with a 100psi cut in and the second in the low 90's then the second will only cut-in if your nearing load critical minimum pressure say 90psi.
lg
no neat sig line
A bit of a variation I've been wondering about--can you run two so-so compressors (the usual $400 "60 gal./7 HP" in tandem, linked together with a valve to isolate one as desired, and gain enough to be worthwhile. That would be MUCH cheaper than buying one good compressor. Is that like dividing by zero?
I like this idea a lot and I understand the cut-in and cutoff principle. Some hardware is needed to prevent the 90 psi tank from getting air from the first while still being able to measure air pressure in the main line to start and its own tank for cutoff. What does that look like? Anyone with a general parts list for plumbing the controls?
I like this idea a lot and I understand the cut-in and cutoff principle. Some hardware is needed to prevent the 90 psi tank from getting air from the first while still being able to measure air pressure in the main line to start and its own tank for cutoff. What does that look like? Anyone with a general parts list for plumbing the controls?
Lol, I knew the other forum you peruse by the last sentence even before I saw your username.
When my Crapsman dies I want to use the 25 gal tank as a receiver for one of those little Makita oiled compressors but don't want the damn thing to run all day.
not needed. you essentially are making one large tank out of the two tanks. if you think of it that way, one tank with two pumps feeding it, one set to cut in at 100psi, and the other set to cut in at 90psi, it should make more sense. you want them both measuring the same tank pressure. isolating them would defeat the whole idea.
I keep reading other places about using a check valve on the compressors before the T, is this really necessary?