Also, the pics the guy sent me of it, says the tank is dated 1958, and made by Beaird in Shreveport, LA. Does this mean its not the 200 psi manchester tank?
Possibly not. The tank in the picture looks exactly like a mid 80's to 2000's Manchester. I find it hard to believe that setup is from 1958. Are we sure he isn't reading patent numbers?
It looks more like the setups made in the late 80's to early 90's, at least from the rather poor pictures.
CL at its finest. Uncertain pictures, backed up by interpretations of other peoples stories.
If it is truly from the 50's it won't be rated that high, won't say ASME etc.
I would pass on it, unless you have some way of inspecting the inside of the tank.
Taping on it to hear corrosion is only about 70% accurate.
To do the 'tap test' you hit it with something like a small brass hammer. A rusted tank will usually sound dead, or very dull, as you move from the side to the center, on the bottom.
Ding, clear like a bell, Ding, muddy ding, thud, as you move over the rusty patch.
Again, not perfectly accurate.
Problem with old tanks and new cheap tanks is that people neglect to drain them of condensate water. Then they rust. When they rust far enough, they leak. It's virtually impossible to save a leaking tank. Not worth the time, risk factor (which is smaller than the exited people will tell you, but still a real concern).
You can't really trust that all the hardware, pressure switch, safety valve, check valve, drain, are still good since its been sitting. Each of these is cheap enough, by themselves, but add all of these to perhaps a pulley, a belt, an new air filter, and some mounting hardware as you switch from one motor mount to another and now you are spending too much. Then you find the compressors blowing oil...
Since you can't do a test run, you have to assume the compressor has seen better days.
I live in a better place to buy this stuff, and I see running mediocre brands of compressor going for 400 bucks all day long. Heck, I've sold a bunch for less than that and they worked great.
This one, if it really is that old, would be a pass.
Age is more a factor than motor or pulleys in that suggestion.