I don't need a compressor yet (though a small one that fills tires and blows shop air to clean dust and dries wet parts would be nice) so I'm sticking to research at the moment.
My goodness, the compressor industry is a tricky one sometimes. Reminds me of the Sprint-MCI days when they made it nearly impossible to comparison shop different long distance plans, they all had unique twists to them.
My understanding is that HP is easily fiddled and not a great indicator of compressor value. CFM is king from what I'm told. Are there ways to game that too in the spec sheet?
One question I have is regarding those CFM @ PSI numbers you always see. For instance, "16.1 CFM at 40 psi and 14 CFM at 90 psi." May as well ask and get it over with-- Why is it that CFM decreases at higher psi? Wouldn't it increase with more pressure?
I know that oil lubricated motors are preferred to oilless, they tend to be quieter and last longer. Cast iron cylinders are preferred too.
I'm not an electrical guy by any means so I'm not sure what the 208/240 power requirements mean for the larger compressors. I've seen 208, 230 and 240 numbers before. I'm used to 120v stuff, what does a laundry/dryer usually run off, and are one of those 200+ numbers more common in the home than the other two? Thanks everyone.
My goodness, the compressor industry is a tricky one sometimes. Reminds me of the Sprint-MCI days when they made it nearly impossible to comparison shop different long distance plans, they all had unique twists to them.
My understanding is that HP is easily fiddled and not a great indicator of compressor value. CFM is king from what I'm told. Are there ways to game that too in the spec sheet?
One question I have is regarding those CFM @ PSI numbers you always see. For instance, "16.1 CFM at 40 psi and 14 CFM at 90 psi." May as well ask and get it over with-- Why is it that CFM decreases at higher psi? Wouldn't it increase with more pressure?
I know that oil lubricated motors are preferred to oilless, they tend to be quieter and last longer. Cast iron cylinders are preferred too.
I'm not an electrical guy by any means so I'm not sure what the 208/240 power requirements mean for the larger compressors. I've seen 208, 230 and 240 numbers before. I'm used to 120v stuff, what does a laundry/dryer usually run off, and are one of those 200+ numbers more common in the home than the other two? Thanks everyone.
