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Compressor feet

slowpoke

Well-known member
Joined
May 11, 2007
Messages
45
Location
Tulsa OK
I noticed in an earlier post by OldCarGuy with a picture showing some adjustable/padded feet on his compressor. I have not seen these before. Can anyone enlighten me. I tried to copy and paste the picture, but was unsucessful. Joe
 
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bmwguru

Active member
Joined
Nov 7, 2008
Messages
38
I went with these for my new Eaton. Got them from McMaster for about $7.50 each. They are rated at 300lbs each so its a bit overkill although my compressor weighed 950lbs with the shipping pallet!! They are available in all different load ratings from 35lbs to 600lbs each.
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Heres a link to the catalog page. http://www.mcmaster.com/#60855k54/=obtsp
 

Stephenw

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Joined
Dec 21, 2006
Messages
1,911
Location
Utah
Compressors are top heavy. I think they should be bolted to the floor. I bolted mine down and used hockey pucks for vibration dampening.

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bucknell

Member
Joined
Jul 13, 2007
Messages
24
There seems to varying opinions on whether to bolt down or not.
I can see both sides of the argument but it may come down to your own comfort level and experience.

I would lean towards not bolting and avoid vibration cracking the feet.
 

JCByrd24

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Joined
Jul 21, 2005
Messages
493
Location
Bath, ME
There seems to varying opinions on whether to bolt down or not.
I can see both sides of the argument but it may come down to your own comfort level and experience.

I would lean towards not bolting and avoid vibration cracking the feet.

Agreed. I put nice soft feet on my 60 gallon Husky (7 tennis balls, works awesome), but I gave it a couple of straps to the wall (as recommended by most of these compressor manufacturers).
 

bmwguru

Active member
Joined
Nov 7, 2008
Messages
38
What Eaton did you get? I really want their 4 cylinder 10hp compressor slowed down and run with the 7.5HP motor. Been saving the $.

Thats the one I got. It's a sweet piece. If you want to discuss my compressor more shoot me a PM. Back on topic. I put the feet on mine to see if it would make a difference in noise. It really didn't. Oh well should be better for the compressor in the long run. I'm too lazy to take them back off.
 

wantedabiggergarage

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Joined
Feb 25, 2006
Messages
3,897
Location
Independence, MO, USA.
I've seen several people not bolt down, but place on feet, then run a chain around the tank (sometimes in some hose) the tank to the wall. That way it couldn't walk far and according to one person "earthquake resistant". (not too applicable in this area)
 
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GreyOwl

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Joined
Oct 23, 2007
Messages
549
Location
North Las Vegas
On the bolted down compressors I see on here every one has a pad beneath the leg and the floor but no one has a pad between the washer and leg on top to stop vibrations from traveling through the leg bolt to the floor. I'm thinking car body and engine mounts - they sandwich the bracket in rubber to limit vibration. Wouldn't the same principle be a factor here?

Charles
 

swvega

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Joined
Jun 1, 2007
Messages
84
Location
princeton mn
I bought a speedair by granger when I had a bodyshop back in the mid 70's. It was a 5hp with 80 gallon horizonal tank and came on a heavy duty shipping pallet. I've use it all these years and its worked great. Just now is it getting where it needs a new pallet . I'am just going to rebuild the same basic pallet and re-mount it to that. JUST A THOUGHT. Should be fairly cheap to build.
 

e-tek

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Joined
Dec 19, 2007
Messages
10,690
Location
Saskatoon, SK
I left mine on the pallet as well. GIves it a solid, wide base and is up high enough to put a catch can under the drain hose.
 

krooser

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 3, 2005
Messages
2,377
Location
Waupaca, Wisconsin
My 80 gallon IMC isn't bolted down and hasn't moved an inch in 10 years. I was going to bolt it down, use those fancy feet and stuff but never got around to it. I guess I'm not missing anything.
 

22T

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 8, 2008
Messages
49
Location
New Jersey
I used the isolation mounts from this place. http://www.knchomeshop.com/HSRD.asp . The nut on top that you bolt the compressor to is totaly seperate from the flange that bolts to the floor, so there is no hard link between the two.I bolted it to the floor(just for piece of mind) but I did run it unbolted and it never moved.
 

Kevin54

MEMBER EMERITUS
Joined
Jan 12, 2005
Messages
29,341
Location
Urbana, Ohio
Compressors are top heavy. I think they should be bolted to the floor. I bolted mine down and used hockey pucks for vibration dampening.

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They're not that top heavy unless you are transporting them. I have mine sitting on machine pads and it has not moved since first placed there. Bolting it to the floor seems to be a little bit of overkill. Unless maybe you are in earthquake country or have a hell of a slope in the floor.
 
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