I picked up an old Sears compressor from CL. The tank was leaking but the motor and compressor were good and strong.
Before scrapping the tank I decided to cut it open and investigate the leak and surrounding metal. As you can see in this pic the PO tried to plug the leak with a screw and rubber washer. It didn't work, which is why he gave up on it. He said he bought the compressor new from Sears about 30 years ago. My guess is he didn't drain it very often!
When I rolled it over I could hear the debris sliding around inside the tank.
As I was prying and twisting on stuff it split open a crack that was held together by the paint on the tank! The PO's screw was at one end of the crack.
The panel I cut out. You can see the screw and the thin area right next to it.
Rust and scale inside the tank.
Rust and scale dumped out on the ground. A good 3-4 pounds worth!
Tank waiting for scrappers to come and get it.
Before scrapping the tank I decided to cut it open and investigate the leak and surrounding metal. As you can see in this pic the PO tried to plug the leak with a screw and rubber washer. It didn't work, which is why he gave up on it. He said he bought the compressor new from Sears about 30 years ago. My guess is he didn't drain it very often!
When I rolled it over I could hear the debris sliding around inside the tank.
As I was prying and twisting on stuff it split open a crack that was held together by the paint on the tank! The PO's screw was at one end of the crack.
The panel I cut out. You can see the screw and the thin area right next to it.
Rust and scale inside the tank.
Rust and scale dumped out on the ground. A good 3-4 pounds worth!
Tank waiting for scrappers to come and get it.
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). At first I thought it was build by Speedaire for Sears because of the color. However, there was a different name tag on the tank. Darn if I forgot to get a picture of it.