Black Z Eddie
Member
When an air tool like an impact wrench says it's 90 PSI Max, does that mean under load? Or at the air compressor regulator?
Thanks.
Thanks.
See.... I thought it meant under load. If you set your regulator to 90 psi and pull the trigger, you will see taht the pressure goes down to bout 70 psi or so. If you set your regulator at 120, when you pull the trigger, the actual pressure is at about 90-100 psi and you get MUCH better performance.
You should not be seeing that much pressure drop when you demand air. Sounds like your regulator cannot keep up with it. The gun is rated at 90 psi, period, they don't expect you to have pressure drops like that.
The higher pressure at startup won't hurt anything, set it up to 90 psi under load and go with it. I actually run mine at about 105 - 110 psi all the time but I only see about 5 lb drop at the regulator (cheap regulator) and probably another 5 lbs or so at the end of the hose.
If you are really curious, tee in a gauge at the gun temporarily and set the regulator to whatever it takes for the gun to get 90 lb while under load, at the gun, that is how its rated.
Charles
I get a lot of pressure drop on my air compresser regulator when the gun in under load. It's just a little 10 gallon 2.5 hp. As eschoendorff describes also, mine drops from 90 to 70-75 when under load. So I set the regulator to 115-120 to get the 90.
Sounds like I'm safe with my assumption that the "90 psi max" refers to the actual pressure when under load. I just didn't want the tool blowing up in hands and face.![]()

All the air tools at work, with the exception of lock release on the alignment rack and the wheel lift for the dyno rollers run between 120 and 140 PSI, unregulated. Guns hold up fine. Biggest problems with guns are the hammer case screws breaking from being dropped.
Jim
I know this is an old thread, but I've been dealing with this issue lately. Cheap regulator causing my air tools to not work properly. I removed the regulator altogether, and got the compressor set to run up to 120psi, then kick on around 90psi. I've been running my tools unregulated on my 21 gallon tank. This lets me get two wheels off of my pickup and then back on before I get down to the point where the compressor kicks on, so I'm not running my impact wrench at 120 for very long. I'm trying to figure out whether it's worth it for me to invest in a good higher flowing regulator. My compressor is rated at 4.9 SCFM @ 90 psi, and I mostly air up tires, use the impact wrench for brake jobs and tire rotation, and occasionally a small nail gun. My nail gun acts fine driving 1-1/4" finishing nails even on 1/4" plywood at 110psi.
For comparison after reading this thread, I put my old regulator in-line at the tank, and at the impact wrench. At the tank, the most I could dial it up to was 100psi (tank was at 120psi), when I squeezed the trigger on the impact gun, pressure on the regulator gauge dropped to 60psi (a 40psi DROP!!!), and the gun was running audibly slower than normal - useless! At the gun, the pressure dropped from 100psi to 50psi. Wow, this really is a crappy regulator. It's only good for my stapler/nailer, obviously - with the nailer it dropped from 100psi to 80psi each time the trigger was pulled.
After reading this thread, would it be safe to assume that for the amount I use my impact wrench and other tools (once a month or so) that running them unregulated on no more than 120psi shouldn't hurt a thing?
I know this is an old thread, but I've been dealing with this issue lately. Cheap regulator causing my air tools to not work properly. I removed the regulator altogether, and got the compressor set to run up to 120psi, then kick on around 90psi. I've been running my tools unregulated on my 21 gallon tank. This lets me get two wheels off of my pickup and then back on before I get down to the point where the compressor kicks on, so I'm not running my impact wrench at 120 for very long. I'm trying to figure out whether it's worth it for me to invest in a good higher flowing regulator. My compressor is rated at 4.9 SCFM @ 90 psi, and I mostly air up tires, use the impact wrench for brake jobs and tire rotation, and occasionally a small nail gun. My nail gun acts fine driving 1-1/4" finishing nails even on 1/4" plywood at 110psi.
For comparison after reading this thread, I put my old regulator in-line at the tank, and at the impact wrench. At the tank, the most I could dial it up to was 100psi (tank was at 120psi), when I squeezed the trigger on the impact gun, pressure on the regulator gauge dropped to 60psi (a 40psi DROP!!!), and the gun was running audibly slower than normal - useless! At the gun, the pressure dropped from 100psi to 50psi. Wow, this really is a crappy regulator. It's only good for my stapler/nailer, obviously - with the nailer it dropped from 100psi to 80psi each time the trigger was pulled.
After reading this thread, would it be safe to assume that for the amount I use my impact wrench and other tools (once a month or so) that running them unregulated on no more than 120psi shouldn't hurt a thing?