Which is exactly why you don't seen anyone using one. In an industrial setting with continuous air consumption, they are great, but in a home garage setting, having to crank up one to blow up the kids basketball, or service the tire pressure on the family car, is kind crazy.
To walk out to the shop and fire up the compressor and let it run the whole time you are in the shop, just in case you need air, must be real expensive electricity wise.
Charles
Sorry, I don't get it.
Yes, this is an industrial compressor so it's not typical garage use. That's kind of the point of my post - to get a few people to think a bit outsidethe box. It costs me 12 cents to run this for a full hour. If a person were to use this in a garage I don't see why it would be much different than any other power tool - you turn the switch on, you use the tool. When you're done you turn it off. Same here.
As for pumping basketballs and such, turn the switch and you're ready to go. No waiting for pressure to rise in an empty tank - no worries about corrosion or water in the tank. No ungodly loud noise either. Instant on, instant off. And in any case, many people put tanks on these - mostly because they've just never seen a compressor without an air tank. I didn't see the point - a few seconds of stored air is not going to help much - either the compressor has the capacity or it doesnt.
Finally, you can buy a throwaway compressor and replace it every few years or you buy something that lasts a lifetime.
About the only disadvantage - other than having to turn it on when you wanted to use it (oh, the horror
But otherwise, IMO - this is a no-brainer.
Obviously, YMMV.
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I give up; I thought I had a problem accumulating three compressors over the years. 