turbowoodworker
Well-known member
All the time with nail guns and staplers.
Oh and seems I’m always airing up the kid’s bike or a basketball.
Oh and seems I’m always airing up the kid’s bike or a basketball.
Not only do I still use my air compressor but I need it to build more air compressors.
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Interesting picture, I like it, 2 stage ?
Yes, because it's hard to inflate tires with a cordless drill
I'll bet there is 30% on average time wasted for battery roulette.
What tools are they using that they have to swap batteries so much???

As the batteries degrade the run time does also. The heavier the load applied the shorter the run time.
2 instances for ya

Corded or air supplied tools never have that problem.![]()

If you're smart, there are things you can do that dramatically extend the lifespan of batteries/reduce degradation.
You didn't answer my question: what tools are they using that they're jumping around so much for batteries?
My impacts and ratchets have extremely good runtime. Even with the smaller batteries you're likely to be able to get a full day on those.
The only battery I find myself changing during a day of wrenching is the hood light, mainly because I tend to put my smallest batteries in it. But I've got a couple chargers on the wall a few steps from where I work, and I'm quite sure I spend less time managing batteries than I did when I was dragging hoses around, connecting lines, etc. Hoses were a PITA. If I had a need for a lot of die grinder time, a blast cabinet, etc. I guess I would have kept my old compressor, but I don't miss it and I don't miss hoses (or the noise for that matter - I now have a small 4.2 gal. CAT super-quiet compressor for nailers, filling tires, cleanup, etc. and that's it. I doubt I'll ever have a big compressor again.![]()
IMHO, Both Cordless tools and Pneumatics have a place in my shop.
Pretty much this.
You ideally want be using best tool for the job at hand and sometimes it air and sometimes it Battery .
A day without air in my auto repair business would be a sucky day lol, to the point my air system purposely designed with 2 compressors to reduce a no air scenario .
tyre bay be out, smoke diagnosis be out, no plasma cutting, no blaster, no air hammer, the best impacts be out of use and so forth .
Battery tools are liked as well and 12v milwaukee nice for cabin work and lighter duty engine bay work and so forth .
When on suspensions and brakes I still like air as impacts smaller, hit better, have more control and are far far more durable .
I always got a hose at the bay and it never really in the way if layout and organization been taken care of .
Any professional who can't setup an air system and work with an air hose without ******* and moaning about it ain't the sort of person I want in a shop, you got way more trip hazard issues in a pro shop than 1 rubber hose lol .
Working in the yard, down the pull-a-part or doing a job on a customers driveway suddenly far far nicer task thanks to some battery tools .
The point here is make most of both, no point using battery to the point you struggling from it just as hell bent not touching an air hose and no point being down pull-a-part and wrestling with a breaker bar or swinging a ratchet for 20 minutes when can pack couple useful battery tools .
Both are useful but most useful thing is individuals brain to choose best tools for job or best tools from what he got available to him and working smart safe and organised .
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Air is essential to any shop. In what amounts will depend on the type of shop. Im my opinion there’s really two school of thoughts. Have a small air compressor that can plug in to a wall outlet (2 gal to 30 gallon) for the home shop to air up tires, clear workbench, run some tools intermittently, etc. or go all out with a 240V (60+ gallon) air compressor to run blast cabinets, sanders, paint guns, etc. It really comes down to the user/application but compressed air is definitely essential for any shop.
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