Sorry, I shouldve clarified. In our lab we have a continuous 100psi air feed. The tank we are filling is rated for 200psi at 400F but we will mostly fill at room temp only. I do un derstand that cfm will change based on pressure increase. We we are trying to do is fill the tank 100 psi closing the shop air value and then using the compressor we are trying to use to get us to the 200 psi mark. We know that this 200 psi mark will not be maintained but we are trying to increase the run time of our experiments by having more pressure in our tank. What do you think we could use ?
I would like to get something like this , and hook it up but this one says its working psi is only 40
Thanks for the clarification. Unfortunately, most off the shelf units will come mounted on a tank, and for the output class you're looking at, those tanks are going to be in the 80 gallon range, which is pretty big.
In any case, 200 psi max pressure is kind of rare as most automotive and industrial applications operate at somewhat less than that. As others mentioned, 175 psi is more typical for an industrial compressor. If that's sufficient, there are lots of options available. If 200 psi is a minimum, that will limit your options pretty severely.
Also, as I mentioned, most manufacturers specify their output at a lower psi (90 is common, 100 is less common, higher than that is less common still) so it's going to be tricky to confirm they will make 10cfm at 200 psi.
Anyhow, here's a link to air compressors direct which is a great site that let's you filer by various specifications to find what you're looking for. Hopefully the link preserves the filtering which should be showing some 200 psi models.
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