As a compressor technician, I have been trained to hate Gardner Denver. As far as reciprocating compressors go, most are identical in operation. They mostly run reed valves in and out of the heads, and mostly use a standardised pressure switch. GD screw compressors are a completely different story though. I'm not sure if they're a rebadged Compair, a rebadged Tamrotor, or a ******* child of it's own master, but from a technicians standpoint, and being from Australia, they are one of the worst machines I've had the pleasure of working on from ease of disassembly to access to spare parts. The spare parts supply may be better in other parts of the world, but the best automotive reference I can give is that they are like an Alfa Romeo without any of the fun bits. The company I worked for before the one I work for now were agents for GD and Tamrotor and my toolkit went from being fairly standard to having custom (read as: CUT UP) sockets, wrenches and ratchets, and a whole heap of tools I had to make myself. In all honesty, those machines made me look for a better job.
Sullair, Quincy, Atlas Copco and Kaeser are all better machines, and if you're including reciprocating machines, Ingersoll Rand are very good too (IR screw comps are a NIGHTMARE to work on.)
I suppose my advice is based more on the service and maintenance of machines that run flat out for at least 8 hours a day, but I always dreaded service calls to Compair, GD and Tamrotor machines as they seem to have been designed by someone who doesn't know which end of a hammer is the handle.
If you've got 7.5hp that you can run on singe phase, it might be worth looking to get a small screw compresor. They are quiet, generally pretty easy to maintain so long as the oil and filters are changed regularly, and (a bit or research will confirm this) mostly run 1ph control cirrcuits and just have 3ph running to the motor. It might be worth you looking into a rotary inverter to convert from 1ph to 3ph too... this is the wrong side of the planet, but
something like this is almost certainly available.
All else I'd say is make sure you can see it running before you hand over any hard earned dollars.