Train
Well-known member
Those of you who added pucks to the feet of your upright compressor. Did you use regular hard hockey pucks, or the sponge pucks? My compressor sits on concrete, and it tends to move a fare bit. Will the pucks help this?
I don't play hockey with anti vibration mats and I don't set machinery on hockey pucks.
Use the right product for the job and this works great - cut to size:
http://www.mscdirect.com/browse/tn/...ibration-Controllers/Pads-Mats?navid=12103739

I use automotive body mounts, and use one top and bottom so the compressor floats between the two rubber mounts. Just bolting through a single insulator doesn't do any good, it will dampen only the downstroke not the up.
I don't mean to high jack the thread but can you use isolator pads/hockey pucks and not bolt the compressor down? Just picked up a 60 this weekend and looking to install
I don't mean to high jack the thread but can you use isolator pads/hockey pucks and not bolt the compressor down? Just picked up a 60 this weekend and looking to install
Yes.... I used these on my compressor without bolting to the cement. Works great!
http://www.mcmaster.com/#standard-vibration-control-levelers/=s8eige
I don't mean to high jack the thread but can you use isolator pads/hockey pucks and not bolt the compressor down? Just picked up a 60 this weekend and looking to install
I don't mean to high jack the thread but can you use isolator pads/hockey pucks and not bolt the compressor down? Just picked up a 60 this weekend and looking to install
I don't play hockey with anti vibration mats and I don't set machinery on hockey pucks.
Actually, many people don't know this but hockey pucks were actually invented for air compressors...Back in the early 1900's, Lord Alfred Puck, invented AC pucks for his air compressor...His 9 year old son, Earl (Puck) picked up one of his golf clubs spaced out his hands approx 1 1/2' apart and began smacking the AC puck around in the shop... Alfred was very intrigued and told his son to bring the golf club and the puck outside to the frozen pond...Earl began skating down the ice with the golf club and the AC puck...Alfred called up his pal Lord Stanley and the rest is history.... Go NY Rangers.......![]()
Pucks grow wild here.
The best time to pick them is early spring when the snow is melting.
Typical places to pick them are backyards, public parks and in the snow banks next to garages. A dented garage door with black marks is a good indicator that pucks are growing nearby.
The hard dense black variety are most common, but softer black ones and orange pucks can also be found.
My opinion on the pucks is they would be a little too hard of material to properly absorb the vibration.
Lol, Just yesterday I posted this in another thread here named “Mounting air compressor”
So, I’m just going to cut & paste my post here.
By the way, these really work well.
I just used these, quick simple and available at Home Depot.
The pads measure 3¼” square x 1¼” thick. My compressor is an 80 gal SB that weighs 648 pounds. It’s not bolted down just resting on the pads. The pads carry the weight just fine; the compressor is stable and has not moved at all.
![]()
![]()
And I only paid $3 for 3 used hockey pucks....
I tried the pucks on a painted floor and they do what pucks do, slide everywhere.
Why would you choose a material specifically designed to slide effortlessly for a machine you want to stay put. It doesn't make any sense.
Actually, many people don't know this but hockey pucks were actually invented for air compressors...Back in the early 1900's, Lord Alfred Puck, invented AC pucks for his air compressor...His 9 year old son, Earl (Puck) picked up one of his golf clubs spaced out his hands approx 1 1/2' apart and began smacking the AC puck around in the shop... Alfred was very intrigued and told his son to bring the golf club and the puck outside to the frozen pond...Earl began skating down the ice with the golf club and the AC puck...Alfred called up his pal Lord Stanley and the rest is history.... Go NY Rangers.......![]()
