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Harbor Freight Air Compressor. NEED HELP!

HankRHill

Member
Joined
Aug 31, 2017
Messages
16
So I was looking at two compressors, and something caught my eye. I noticed that the 10 gallon is 5.3 cfm @90 psi, and 6.2 cfm @40 psi. Then I went over and looked at the 21 gallon. It reads 4.7 cfm @90 psi, and 5.8 cfm @40 psi. This doesn't make sense to me. Both motors are the same 2.5 hp, and have the same 125 max psi. Am I missing something? And does tank size matter all that much? I know that the bigger the tank, the less time it cuts on so the motor stays cooler. I thought cfm was a really big deal. Thanks in advance! :beer:
 
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lbhsbz

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 13, 2010
Messages
1,183
Location
Long Beach CA
CFM is a function of motor/compressor size and has nothing to do with the tank size. The tank is just storage. You'll get higher CFM until the storage is depleted, but after that, the unit will supply the rated CFM. Bigger tanks are nice for high volume intermittent loads like impacts/air hammers, but for sanders/grinders, etc...you need more pump/motor.
 

Strouty

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 21, 2010
Messages
38,224
Location
Southern Maine
First problem is that you are looking in Harbor Freight for an air compressor.

Second problem is, I wouldn't believe any ratings they offer regardless of what it was.

Hopefully someone else will tell you something better than me, sorry to be so negative.
 
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Codejack

Banned
Joined
Jul 21, 2017
Messages
838
Location
Chattanooga, TN
What lbhsbzblzhsblhzslbzhslzhbslzlshhlsbslz said :)

Get a big tank for wrenching and worry less about CFM; get more CFM for grinding/sanding/painting... a big tank is still nice, but :shrug
 

jakemac

Well-known member
Joined
May 21, 2013
Messages
9,035
Location
New England
CFM has little to do with the size of the motor or tank. You need to compare the ratings of the pumps.
 
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