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Help Me ID This Compressor!

Bruce Amacker

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 6, 2011
Messages
573
Location
Cleveland, Ohio
I'm helping a friend with this. I think it's a 3ph 10HP Quincy but I'm not sure. The only thing I'm sure of is that it is 3 phase. There are no tags at all on the motor or pump, and the tank tag will be worthless for the most part.

Any info?

Thanks!













 
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Roberts210

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Dec 21, 2015
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Location
Missouri
Proudly built in the U.S.A. by St. Louis Shipbuilding and Steel.

From the website: St. Louis Ship was located on the site at the foot of East Davis Street in the Carondelet section of St. Louis, where James B. Eads built the Union Navy's gunboats during the Civil War. It was called the Rohan Boat, Boiler & Tank Company when it was acquired by Herman Pott in 1933 and renamed St. Louis Shipbuilding & Steel Co. It closed in 1984.
 

Roberts210

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Location
Missouri
They had a subsidiary called Federal Barge Lines, which built tugboats. Maybe that was on a tugboat at one time.
 
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Trey T

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Aug 3, 2011
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3,749
Location
Houston, TX
If you're sure that's a 10HP 3ph motor, then that's unlikely a Quincy 325 because it's typically driven by 3 or 5HP motor. However, from the photo, that looks exactly like a Quincy 325 pump ... lol ...

That motor looks like a vintage westinghouse
 

redmondjp

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Nov 25, 2014
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2,318
Location
Redmond, WA
X3 on Quincy 325

The data plate is on the compressor pump, painted over, on the bottom edge of the side access plate on the crankcase. You can barely see it in the pictures above.

If it has stamped numbers in it, it could read like this: "325 14"
with the first number being the pump model number, and the second number being the Record Of Change or ROC.
 
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