novaboy009
Well-known member
Well, the bearings in my air compressor electric motor appear to have died. The motor is going immediately to overload protection/blown breaker. After fiddling around with the pressure switch, pressure relief valve, etc, I've narrowed it down to the motor. This was a used Craigslist special - 60 gallon, 7 (peak) hp Porter Cable compressor. It was used in a wood shop and appears to have some mileage on it.
Motor specs:
I'm in the process of a full blown restoration on my Nova, with the body stripped to bare metal. I'm trying to complete the build before August due to the arrival of a new baby. Budget needs to be constrained due to investments in the car project and (obviously) family spending coming up. I'm going to paint in my shop, so I need a compressor that will run an HVLP gun. I prefer electric to air powered sanding tools, so that isn't a big concern at this point.
1) Can I use a harbor freight special "3 hp" motor on this compressor?
http://www.harborfreight.com/3-horsepower-compressor-duty-motor-68302.html#.UxczJM68ZXo
It specs at 12.25 Amps vs the original 14 amps. They both run at the same rpm and I could reuse the pulley from the original motor.
2) If I want a Baldor/Eaton/Century motor, I'm probably $300 in and I should go get a new similar compressor for $450 (Husky/Kobalt/Cambell Hausfield knock offs).
3) I can use my dad's fairly large Craftsman oilless compressor. I think it's around 30 gallons (33?) and probably has enough juice to spray a car in pieces if I take my time.
4) I could ask around about getting it rebuilt, but the last time I asked our local place to rebuild an old electric motor for my '47 Craftsman bandsaw, they came back with a $350 quote.
What would you do?
Kev
Motor specs:
I'm in the process of a full blown restoration on my Nova, with the body stripped to bare metal. I'm trying to complete the build before August due to the arrival of a new baby. Budget needs to be constrained due to investments in the car project and (obviously) family spending coming up. I'm going to paint in my shop, so I need a compressor that will run an HVLP gun. I prefer electric to air powered sanding tools, so that isn't a big concern at this point.
1) Can I use a harbor freight special "3 hp" motor on this compressor?
http://www.harborfreight.com/3-horsepower-compressor-duty-motor-68302.html#.UxczJM68ZXo
It specs at 12.25 Amps vs the original 14 amps. They both run at the same rpm and I could reuse the pulley from the original motor.
2) If I want a Baldor/Eaton/Century motor, I'm probably $300 in and I should go get a new similar compressor for $450 (Husky/Kobalt/Cambell Hausfield knock offs).
3) I can use my dad's fairly large Craftsman oilless compressor. I think it's around 30 gallons (33?) and probably has enough juice to spray a car in pieces if I take my time.
4) I could ask around about getting it rebuilt, but the last time I asked our local place to rebuild an old electric motor for my '47 Craftsman bandsaw, they came back with a $350 quote.
What would you do?
Kev