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Air hose quick disconnect

Krell

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Mar 25, 2007
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3
Who makes the best one , or does it make any difference
Thanks.
 
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DavidtheDuke

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Jan 6, 2008
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Who makes the best one , or does it make any difference
Thanks.

DO NOT get ones from Home Depot. I bought three, and three leaked, no STAYED WIDE OPEN. Milton seems pretty good, we use them at the shop.
 

jay50

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Oct 28, 2007
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I have found the ones with the most balls (bearings?) inside to be the best way to judge quality. Milton seems to be the best.
 

engnerdan

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Apr 18, 2007
Messages
316
Location
Minnesota
I use the high flow ones from milton (V style) on my impacts and air hoses. They flow 85% more air then the standard M style which is nice on the high air flow tools, and they work with the regular M style fittings that everybody seems to have.

http://www.northerntool.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/product_6970_200319823_200319823

http://www.northerntool.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/product_6970_200323681_200323681

I stick to name brand ones no matter what style I am buying, the cheapies just leak too much.

-Dan
 

OldCarGuy

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Nov 29, 2005
Messages
1,984
Location
Ohio
I use brass couplers and fittings manufactured by Parker Hannifin..

image.img


image.img
 

mulepackin

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Dec 13, 2006
Messages
909
Location
Montana
I've always used Milton T style. Thats what my father has on all his air tools, and so it only made sense to stay with the same style. Have never had a Milton connector fail or leak.
 

Uncle Buck

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I think Parker Hannifin's are likely about the best quality you will get, but Milton's are not bad, plus you will find them in everything from dedicated tool supply houses to auto parts stores and on to the local Walmart and Ace hardware, virtually anywhere. I cannot speak to interchangability with the Parker Hannifin line though. I am partial to an old style Shrader that I think is no longer sold these days myself.
 

russlaferrera

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Nov 24, 2006
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Location
Central Virginia
[I am partial to an old style Shrader that I think is no longer sold these days myself.[/QUOTE]

Uncle Buck. how old we talking here? I remember Shrader fittings in auto class that were the size of a garden hose connection and you screwed then together. This was in the 1960s
 

Uncle Buck

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[I am partial to an old style Shrader that I think is no longer sold these days myself.

Uncle Buck. how old we talking here? I remember Shrader fittings in auto class that were the size of a garden hose connection and you screwed then together. This was in the 1960s[/QUOTE]

Nothing that big, these are along the lines of the Milton's most (including myself use) but their design is a bit different and you can easily connect, or disconnect the two with one hand if need be.
 

goodfellow

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Dec 17, 2006
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Location
NoVA
There was a test done some years ago (late 70s) which put a lot of the brand name couplers and fittings through a series of punishing tests. I can't recall if it was Popular Mechanics or Hot Rod --but the end result was Milton and ACME tied as the most durable

Milton is the most common -- and no one's ever heard of ACME, but I switched to ACME and have never had any problems

here's what they look like --

http://www1.mscdirect.com/CGI/GSDRVSM?PACACHE=000000044700049
 
Last edited:

ImportTuner

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Jan 9, 2007
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Location
SF Bay Area
There was a test done some years ago (late 70s) which put a lot of the brand name couplers and fittings through a series of punishing tests. I can't recall if it was Popular Mechanics or Hot Rod --but the end result was Milton and ACME tied as the most durable

Milton is the most common -- and no one's ever heard of ACME, but I switched to ACME and have never had any problems

http://www1.mscdirect.com/CGI/GSDRVSM?PACACHE=000000044687958

here's what they look like --

Bad link ...
 

l_bilyk

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Joined
Mar 11, 2005
Messages
1,773
Location
Ontario, Canada
Most of my fittings are amflo, because thats what we sell at work. My couplers are either lincoln or milton quick connects. Spend the extra money and buy a really nice coupler. They are worth it.
 

SteveU

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Nov 20, 2006
Messages
1,243
Location
Michigan
I use the type V Miltons, never had any leak & had noticibly more power on the tools than with type M on the same tool at the same pressure. They have something about not using on percussion tools but I've ran impacts & an air hammer plugged into them no problem.
 
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wilbilt

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Aug 17, 2006
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I bought some Tomco couplers from PoorOwner on this board. I like them, although they are a bit bulky. The zero-pressure disconnect and the universal compatibility are nice features. Most of my older tools have The Milton "Automotive" couplers, but the new ones seem to always come with the "Industrial" style.
The Tomcos work with either one.

215KC8Q2GQL_AA280_.jpg
 

83diesel

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Joined
Feb 9, 2008
Messages
206
I would stay away from brass on any impact gun or air hammer. I have found the vibration tends to snap the male fitting over a short period of time.

I agree with everyone, stay with a quality brand, milton, amflo, parker, prevost, etc.

I bought CH couplers that said the would interchange with milton, every single one leaks.

I use the high flow or the 3/8 flow couplers so you get the max power out of your air tools, worth the money when your 1/2" gun can break a bolt a 3/4 gun normally handles when the 3/4 gun won't fit. Go with something you can easily get in your area, you never know when you might need several more fittings (homemade test equipment).
 

porcupine73

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Jan 22, 2008
Messages
576
Location
Buffalo, NY USA
Yes stay away from the home despot and sears fittings, those are junk. I had done everything with the 3/8" single shutoff type from sears and the female ends are garbage. They stick open, leak, and are just plain fussy. The first few time I took them back for exchange, and sears told me I have to bring in all the parts that came in the package (ie all the male fittings too). I said um...I have those on all my tools and argued with them until they opened up a package and gave me replacements which were junk too. So I got rid of all those

and switched to Parker 1/2" no shutoff high flow style from mcmaster.com These are wonderful, the don't leak at all, and I am very very happy with them.

All my air tools I always run a hose whip from the connector to the tool, never putting the male fitting right on the tool itself.
 

ronnyg801

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Joined
Dec 11, 2006
Messages
26
I use both the Tomco and the Prevost with Milton M connectors ... the Prevost really rocks ... :)

http://www.ultimategarage.com/hardware/prevost.html



I'll second the nomination for Prevost. their fittings are awesome! They also have some pretty sweet hoses that have a swivel end so as you are unwinding them they don't have to be "looped" or whatever from being coiled up. The way the fittings attach and detach rule!
 

Danglerb

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Sep 6, 2007
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Location
SoCal
Who would carry premium couplers in SoCal, where I could drive by tomorrow and pick up a couple etc.? McFadden Dale only had Amflo when I stopped by today. Carquest maybe?
 

bockwho

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Jan 1, 2008
Messages
6
prevost

saw these in Zurich for the first time about 5 years ago.. my shop will have them. even though I get handfulls from my current employer
 

Danglerb

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Sep 6, 2007
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Location
SoCal
I stopped at NAPA, Carquest, AirGas, and a few more places, nobody ever heard of anti whip or safety air couplers, but more than a few thought it was a good idea and wanted one. Ended up at McFadden Dale industrial hardware and bought one Amflo C61 universal to replace the POS that came on my sears compressor. Watching ebay or ordering online seems like the only option.
 

Industrial Concepts

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Nov 25, 2007
Messages
97
I stopped at NAPA, Carquest, AirGas, and a few more places, nobody ever heard of anti whip or safety air couplers, but more than a few thought it was a good idea and wanted one. Ended up at McFadden Dale industrial hardware and bought one Amflo C61 universal to replace the POS that came on my sears compressor. Watching ebay or ordering online seems like the only option.

We are a Prevost Master Distributor in KY & the first time I saw Prevost componants was in CA. Most auto paint supplier should have the non safety push button Prevost couplers. If they don't have the safety couplers, they can order the coupler for you.
 

Danglerb

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Sep 6, 2007
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Location
SoCal
I just found the non safety version of the Prevost on ebay, $20 shipped. I'm going to put the non safety Amflo universal I bought today on the compressor in the morning and see how I like it.
 

Spookrider

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Joined
Jul 27, 2007
Messages
525
Location
Eaton, Indiana
Milton-A
What my Dad used back in mid 50's and now where I work at is using the same.
I have some Napa one and they seem to be doing fine.(Aero there terms)
 

Rusty67

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Joined
Jul 28, 2007
Messages
1,294
Location
LA, CA
What about taking this a step further and talking about who makes the best swivel fitings. Something like these:
http://www.grainger.com/Grainger/items/6ZF41

I've got a cheap one from HF but the thing leaks air (of course) I only bought it to see if I'd like have these suckers for the supposed convienence... of course now I need to go buy good ones.....
 

dxdexter

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Aug 1, 2006
Messages
1,923
I use Type "M" connections. I have used quite a few different manufacturers over the years, but gravitate back to Milton because of both quality and price. I prefer Milton for the female end. I have found no real difference between a cheap male end or a name brand male end.
 
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