If that compressor has a cast iron pump, it might be somewhat quiet and decent, but it is pretty small.
My portable unit is a porter cable suitcase style oil free and it is rated at something like 150 psi and puts out a lot of cfm for being compact and portable. It has help up great for many years of pro use, but is noisy as can be. The other units I have/had were cman 5hp 20 gallon with aluminum pumps and a sanborn with an aluminum pump. They all **** due to noise and were rated for no more than 10 cfm at 90 psi. They also aren't built all that well.
When I upgraded, I went older. It is a v style pump and cast iron and the pump weighs in at about 200lbs, but it is a 240v 5hp that turns slow. It isn't quiet but has a lower pitch and puts out a ton of air. It is pressure lubed and is built to last and be rebuilt when needed.
California air tools compressors look appealing for smaller and quiet units, but with mixed reviews and I wouldn't expect them to last forever. The big, older cast iron compressors at 5+ hp and slow speeds are great, but expensive, very heavy, big, and take a ton of power. It seems like mid size compressors have less to offer.
With a used compressor you either want to make sure you can get parts and repair it if needed, or that it is inexpensive enough to toss it if or when it fails. Before I bought my big one, I made sure parts were available and then bought a full rebuild kit to have on hand.
Impact guns work fine on smaller compressors, but your use will be more limited. The porter cable unit I have will run a drywall texture gun non stop, which is a bit surprising. Die grinders, sanders, and blast cabinets are the worst to try to feed. The big unit I got finally satisfies my needs and is more than enough for the size blast nozzle I am using and the grinders are no challenge for it. Bigger is better, if you can swing it.