I think I have a line on one. Yea looks like this is 3-4?
Updated. I am in Burlington Vermont. Sorry guys I thought it was in there.
There is no reason that the tank and compressor have to be mounted together. You could even build a shelf over the tank and mount the baseplate from the other compressor tank that's leaking. You could also put it on the floor with a flex tube to isolate vibration.
Is there any sort of rubber isolation of the motor and pump to the shelf underneath? If not, you might want to consider some.
I thought that's what he was using the blue pad for?
Nice thread. Way to adapt to what's available. The OP wanted a stout-ish horizontal and ended up with a remote pump vertical setup.
Just curious what you are needing that particular amount of air for?
Don't get me wrong, there's never enough air, square footage, amperage, lighting, tools, boxes the tools go in, etc, etc... We can always want more.
Yea it is a interlocking floor mat I had lying around. It should work for now. I will grab some horse stall mat or the like if it wears out.
Doing some further research I believe the pump is a Ren-14. The head casting makes me believe it is the 14 instead of the 10.
OP . . . . you might as well take advantage of your physical setup with the separated compressor from tank to setup airline system that captures water. See prior GJ threads on Franzinator and either black pipe steel or copper airlines.
Yes that looks like a REN model instead of the R model ... another guy on here have one similar w/o the centrifugal unloader. I haven't seen R10 or R15 have any inspection plate cover at all.
It takes a lot more horsepower to get to 175psi than it does to 125psi. Do you have any way to measure the motor current? You can get away with exceeding the full-load amps for a short time, so long as the motor has a chance to cool down between run cycles.
What would I need? Clamp on multimeter?
I wont push it until I get the 5hp motor. This one is setup basically per spec rpm for a 3 hp motor at 125psi