We bought, for the family home-shop / occasional use, the biggest 110 powered thing we could get.(no 220 in the shop). I believe the tank is only 30 gallon and it makes about 8CFM. Not much in air tool use. It will run an impact gun for removing wheels and such, but high consumption tools like a die grinder will run down the tank in seconds and have the compressor running non-stop. It's just enough for the little weekend projects.
I agree 100%.
I had a
mac 26 gallon 7.1CFM 120v. Which is just a
Re-branded belaire. Needed a 20A circuit, would pop a 15A. I ran it for years, ran impacts, grinders, ratchets, air hammers, cutoff wheel, nail guns, etc. The only two that taxed it were the cutoff and die grinder, but you could run for a while on one of those. I later found a smoking deal on a 60 gallon 14cfm. I'd never go back to the smaller one, and actually the 60 gallon footprint wasn't much bigger (immovable and requires 220v).
I built a fence, roofed, sided, framed, and trimmed. All things could have been done without, but went much much much faster with pneumatic tools. Sometimes just being able to blow dust/dirt/sawdust off something is handy.
Miscallenous things I've used for:
-I like to use the finish nailer when rough assembling stuff. I'll use it like a 3rd hand to temporarily hold something in place. Easy to put in and pulls out, doesn't leave much of a mark.
-Works great for pressurizing water rockets
-Drain garden hoses for winter. Yes I know gravity can, but entails removing them and putting on a slope. I just store them on the hose reels outside since they're dry. Just disconnect from spigot.
-Replacing my water heater the tank was so rusty the water wouldn't drain. I hooked up air to where the anode rod went in and was able to pressure drain the water out so I didn't have to carry 40 gallons of water up the stairs.
-Cleaning carbs on small engines, able to force air through jets/passages to clean out
Things I looked for in my first compressor:
Duty cycle - how long it's made to run. The 60 gal I bought is rated 100%. Higher is better
CFM@90PSI - volume of air it can produce, more is better. Most tools run 90PSI.
Oil vs. Oil free - compressor, not tools. Self explanatory. IMO, oil last longer. They are much quieter. When I was shopping they tended to have more CFM also.