sberry
Banned
I got a big box of stuff from a sale early on, have H and bought a couple 3 or 4 boxes of plugs for tools, the cost to change would be significant but the stuff is hard to work. My bud used auto stuff, his seemed to work too.
This is pretty good and goes after the low hanging fruit. All pretty much cheap easy and maybe even free.
But as to the OP, if it was working yesterday, quit all in a week its highly unlikely it wore out but that something went wrong?
I know a bunch of auto body types, shops, mechanics and even a plumber don't give a dam about all this fitting size stuff, they plug it in, it works, they use it. The trades been using this stuff forever since they invented it but now wre suddenly decide it wont work for us in the burbs?
I will admit I would change if I was starting again today for a couple reasons and the modern hi flow may serve 3/4 tools anyway. Ease of connection would be another one and simple design skills would be another as I learned to supply more with less and get rid of the hy7drant idea way in the beginning and go to hose reels for these applications like they should be anyway, save the extra from connectors and fittings and apply to reels right up front.

Thought to myself, all the boys rave about air tools - why my gun no good?When I got my 30 gal oiless compressor a couple years ago (my wife at the time bought it for me) I plugged it in in the garage and turned it on. The compressor was rated to put out 150psi. I let it pump all the way until it cut out. I plugged in my impact (IR231) and took it to a couple of lugnuts. it was a freaking dog. No guts. I started thinking "this junk *** compressor" I really wanted a 220v 80 gallon stationary. My brother in law has an older version of this small compressor. I asked him how his worked. he said he had no problem taking lugs off with his 1/2" impact. I started taking a closer look at the plumbing on mine, the plumbing on his, the plumbing on several in stores and the plumbing on my compressor at work (IR 80 gal horizontal running on 460v)
What I found was that the plumbing on mine was running out and going thru a tiny 1/8" hose that fed a tiny manifold then thru the regulator and finally to the fittings that I plugged my air hose into. The other compressors I looked at did not have this set-up of the tiny hose/manifold ****. I decided to put a T fitting in as close to the compressor tank as I could and use the fittings that were the same size as my outlet pipe. I have the high flo fittings on everything at work and decided to put these on at home if for nothing else just so all my stuff was the same. I fired up the compressor and when it cut out, I plugged in again and it was night and day difference. The impact worked as it should. Now with 30 gal of air on reserve versus the 80 I have at work the compressor cycles more often but typically I can get 5-6 lugnuts off before the compressor ever kicks back on. I never have to wait for the compressor to catch up unless I am running a die grinder for a very long period of time.
Collectively all of the restrictions between the tank and the inlet of the impact made a difference in the power output of it (with the available pressure basically the same) I am not saying a more expensive larger compressor isnt better than my 30 gal oiless (it surely is) but with a decent impact, decent pressure and decent flow of this air available to the gun, it should take lugnuts off pretty easily.
Just to clear things up. So lets go back 6months, I got my hands on this compressor and then I was given a hand me down 1/2 impact I referred to in this topic. I got excited, the sky is the limit now that I have air tools!!!
Well first little task I figured lets give this gun a try.. believe I tried some 15 or 16mm nuts to break free and it failed. I was likeThought to myself, all the boys rave about air tools - why my gun no good?
Anyways the gun had been sitting in my fathers tool closet for probably 7-8 years since last used if not more. So after looking into a bit further I realized that it says to "add oil daily" so i added some oil and it seemed to work a bit better. Fast forward to a couple of months ago as i wanted to do a tire change and realized that with the gun you really have to hold the trigger to do anything.. seems takes a lot of air to get anything done hence training the tank. figured it can't be normal so chalked it up as a worn out gun?
Well last week I was doing another change (yes I know I have a lot of cars) and this issue came up again and I figured well lets investigate a bit further was going on. I see CH, Husky guns constantly pop up on classifieds for fairly cheap so I figured if that's all it was I'd grab a second hand gun..
Some of the guns have an internal regulator, a power adjustment. DA sanders have the same thing. My impact has a 4 speed click stop but had older cheaper ones that it seems had a screw type. Its been a while and don't recall the details, the CP I use has full power in reverse.
I agree collectively it can be a problem and those small comps can have some tiny stuff on them. It can be worth a little re plumbing and in one of these threads it was mentioned that they may swap some regulators but ones from small pancakes are not going to be sufficient for 1/2 air gun.
Measure it at the other end of the hose. Doesn't matter much what it says at the tank, the tool only knows what it sees, wants 90 at the inlet for full power. Measured like this,,,,,, after the hose and all connections. Small connects actually keep it from dropping as much where you were reading, open it up and it will fall off. Air flow makes pressure drop, little flow, little drop, huge flow, lotso drop.I don't even drop down to 90psi. Not sure whoever said that once trigger is pulled I'd drop 40-50psi was being sarcastic or what but I certainly don't have that issue
small air gun it wont make so much difference, big a lot. It would actually matter after a point more than up to a point.
What would you suggest he do then?I wouldn't go the route of what some others are suggesting, "just crank up the regulator to till it works". This is going to make your comp cycle way more often, shortening the life of it.
If I remember correctly 1/4 NPT couplings fit 3/8" hoses.
Try taking the regulator off first. I removed mine and put a quick connect in its place. Hose goes into the quick connect and if I need the regulator it plugs into the quick connect.
I wouldn't go the route of what some others are suggesting, "just crank up the regulator to till it works". This is going to make your comp cycle way more often, shortening the life of it.
Not true..The compressor currently is set to start up and pump until the cut out pressure is reached. This is before the regulator so it doesn't have anything to do with the pressure in the tank or the cut in/out pressure. The only thing the regulator does is controls the amount of air pressure that leaves the tank to your tool(s)
Here is what I would do and it should not cost you anything:
In your first pic you posted there is your tank pressure gauge and your regulator gauge. I would take the regulator off and connect your air hose directly to the output just coming off of your tank pressure gauge. See if your problem goes away. If the problem remains then it is either the hose restricting the air or the gun drawing way too much volume when you pull the trigger. If the problem DOES go away then I would install a T fitting between the two gauges and run your air hose to the impact there. You can leave the quick connect on the output of the regulator in case you need to run different tools that need much less pressure.
What would you suggest he do then?
You can get 1/4" or 3/8" thread couplers and plugs, depending on thread size on hose. Then, you can buy 1/4" or 3/8" body couplers and plugs, with any size thread. Example, I have 1/4" thread plugs to thread in tool inlet, with 3/8" bodies. They're larger and have larger inside diameters. After that, the quick coupler has 3/8" threads to accept the hose with 3/8" body to accept the larger plugs.
If you set the regulator to 40 psi or 120 psi it has NOTHING to do with the compressor running to it's cut out pressure. Nobody said to turn up his cut out pressure. The regulator in his set up has nothing to do with how much pressure the tank will build.
I never said the regulator has to do with how much psi the tank fills up with. The tank psi is the high switch. The regulator has to do with when the compressor will turn on. The regulator is the low switch, at least it is on every compressor I've dealt with.
Not on his compressor or mine at home or mine here at work.
I believe the reason it was suggested (at least my thought on it) is that the fittings on my set-up at home that feed the regulator and the manifold are very small and the amount of flow coming out of the compressor was greatly reduced.
The cut in and cut out on his and mine and the big Ingersol here at work are controlled by an electric switch under the cover that is fed air pressure from the tank via a small sensing line. I believe the electric switch contacts open when the specified air pressure overcomes the spring pressure inside of the switch and makes the motor stop spinning (high cut out). When the tank pressure drops to a certain pressure the contacts close and it begins pumping again.