jm101
Member
Hello,
A friend recently bought a house with his first garage, and I am planning to get him a used Quincy compressor.
I found an appropriate one, looks to be about a 215 with a 1.5hp motor.
However when looking at the pictures the motor is wired straight through the pressure switch as opposed to a motor starter. I am only schooled on larger compressors where wiring a motor through the pressure switch would not work. Given the cost of a magnetic motor starter, it breaks the deal if I need to get one in addition to the compressor.
I have seen lots of little homeowner compressors, at box stores, that are wired through the pressure switch, so I guess my question is at what motor size -current- is a starter required?
I have rebuilt many Quincys, but never one this small. I figured give it a little top end refresh, inspect the bottom end, seal off any air leaks, build a belt guard, and get a new air filter setup. Should be a good compressor for him for a good long time.

A friend recently bought a house with his first garage, and I am planning to get him a used Quincy compressor.
I found an appropriate one, looks to be about a 215 with a 1.5hp motor.
However when looking at the pictures the motor is wired straight through the pressure switch as opposed to a motor starter. I am only schooled on larger compressors where wiring a motor through the pressure switch would not work. Given the cost of a magnetic motor starter, it breaks the deal if I need to get one in addition to the compressor.
I have seen lots of little homeowner compressors, at box stores, that are wired through the pressure switch, so I guess my question is at what motor size -current- is a starter required?
I have rebuilt many Quincys, but never one this small. I figured give it a little top end refresh, inspect the bottom end, seal off any air leaks, build a belt guard, and get a new air filter setup. Should be a good compressor for him for a good long time.
