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securing air compressor??

WD40

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Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan, Canada
I have a 60 gal /5hp Quincy air compressor, is there any way of securing it besides bolting it to the floor?
My floor has heating lines running in the concrete and I do not want to drill holes in them!
 
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Outlawmws

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Assuming this is a vertical tank orientation, get a couple of water heater straps and tie it to the wall. (Not sure if other areas stock these, but in Earthquake land, it's a mandatory thing...)
 

bob15

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You don't need to bolt it, it isn't going to move. I have a 60 gallon vertical that hasn't moved in years. Had a 40 gallon on the farm that didn't move in 40+ years, never bolted. The 40 gallon was replaced with a 120 gallon horizontal which hasn't moved in 20 years, never bolted either.

You'll be fine be fine not bolting it.....

bob
 

Zelatore

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You don't need to bolt it, it isn't going to move. I have a 60 gallon vertical that hasn't moved in years. Had a 40 gallon on the farm that didn't move in 40+ years, never bolted. The 40 gallon was replaced with a 120 gallon horizontal which hasn't moved in 20 years, never bolted either.

You'll be fine be fine not bolting it.....

bob

What he said.

I've had 2 60 gallon uprights over the last 15 years and never bolted a one down. No problems to report.

On the other hand, I am more-or-less in earthquake country so maybe I should think about strapping the sucker just to be safe...of course, if I get hit with something big enough to knock the compressor over I figure that will be the least of my problems.
 

Outlawmws

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What he said.

I've had 2 60 gallon uprights over the last 15 years and never bolted a one down. No problems to report.

On the other hand, I am more-or-less in earthquake country so maybe I should think about strapping the sucker just to be safe...of course, if I get hit with something big enough to knock the compressor over I figure that will be the least of my problems.

Not really, Loma Prietta knocked over more than a few vertical file cabinets where I was working, and did little other damage. My house and my mother's were not damaged, but an antique armoir I had stored at her house fell over and busted to pieces. The shock waves are completely unpredictable.
 

sawbuck

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put rubber furniture pads under the feet...wont move or vibrate....Home Depot 6 bucks
 

WhoWhatNow

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Don't bolt it to the floor. I called a local compressor shop when I first got mine and asked about integrity of the tank on older compressors. The guy said that most of the tank failures he has seen in 26 years in the business were due to tanks being bolted to a rigid support, i.e. a concrete floor. This is because when the compressor is on it vibrates. If you bolt it to something rigid the energy is dissipated by flexing the weakest point: the welds on the tank. Apparently, this is how tanks explode. He said a pallet should be fine because the wood will flex before the tank welds. Don't know for sure if this is true but it sounds correct. I am going to put mine on a stall mat and call it a day.
 

metaleltr

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You could keep it bolted to the shipping pallet, then bolt the pallet to the floor if it is absolutely necessary to secure it to the floor.
 

badtomatoes

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I've got a 60 gal upright that isn't bolted or otherwise secured. It's resting on the concrete.

When it runs, it vibrates enough where it "walks" slowly away from the wall. Concrete is smooth, level and in like new conditionl, BTW.

I was thinking about bolting it into the concrete with a layer of rubber in between to dampen vibrations transmitted into the floor. Any thoughts?
 
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PT Doc

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I have a 60 gal /5hp Quincy air compressor, is there any way of securing it besides bolting it to the floor?
My floor has heating lines running in the concrete and I do not want to drill holes in them!

I'd guess that it weighs 400#. If you put something like horse stall mat under it it would not move. Is the floor fairly flat? My qt5 since on 2 layers of horse stall mats and it's not going anywhere. Put something that will absorb some vibration. I went with 2x 24" pieces stacked so that the vibration would diminis likely better than using just little pads, but who knows. It was $35 for a 4'x6 mat. Tough to cut though.
 

crewchief888

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neither o our shop compressors, 80gal & 120gal are secured to the floor, both still sitting on the shipping pallets.
my home comprssor isnt secured to the shelf that it sits on, and has never moved.
compressor in my service truck is welded to the floor to keep it from tipping over.


:beer:
 

koditten

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MY 80 gallon unit is sitting on 3, 4 x 4 wood blocks. I just lag bolted thru the top of the tank foot into the 4 x 4. Doesn't move at all and I can now park my floor jack under the compressor.

If you do something like this, make sure that you remain aware of the tank drain on the bottom of the tank. I replaced that stupid pet **** thing with 3/8 street elbow and and put a valve in a more user friendly area. I do a better job of getting rid of the water now taht I can open the drain without having to lie on the floor.
 

jshillin

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I bolted rubber feet to me 80 gallon upright compressor and it hasn't moved a bit in 3 years.
 

Chris Adams

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Not really, Loma Prietta knocked over more than a few vertical file cabinets where I was working, and did little other damage. My house and my mother's were not damaged, but an antique armoir I had stored at her house fell over and busted to pieces. The shock waves are completely unpredictable.

I live between three major faults, Landers, Big Bear, and I can SEE the San Andreas from my house.

Thing is, any quake that will tip my squatty, 80 gallon compressor with it's light aluminum pump will take down the frame wall behind it.

Still, always a good idea to secure anything in Earthquake land. My compressor is actually safety secured by the two heavy hoses going to the wall mounts.


Don't bolt it to the floor. I called a local compressor shop when I first got mine and asked about integrity of the tank on older compressors. The guy said that most of the tank failures he has seen in 26 years in the business were due to tanks being bolted to a rigid support, i.e. a concrete floor. This is because when the compressor is on it vibrates. If you bolt it to something rigid the energy is dissipated by flexing the weakest point: the welds on the tank. Apparently, this is how tanks explode. He said a pallet should be fine because the wood will flex before the tank welds. Don't know for sure if this is true but it sounds correct. I am going to put mine on a stall mat and call it a day.

I've seen dozens of tank failures at the leg welds. I figure your compressor guy is on to something. All of them had been hard mounted.


I've got a 60 gal upright that isn't bolted or otherwise secured. It's resting on the concrete.

When it runs, it vibrates enough where it "walks" slowly away from the wall. Concrete is smooth, level and in like new conditionl, BTW.

I was thinking about bolting it into the concrete with a layer of rubber in between to dampen vibrations transmitted into the floor. Any thoughts?

That would worry the heck out of me. I have had them on epoxy, super smooth concrete and linoleum tile. Also of them on super slippery plastic blocks.
The super slippery plastic allows me to push the compressors around as needed.
None of them have ever walked under load. 60-80 gallon, 265-565 lbs.
There has got to be a reason it walks, I would suspect something way out of balance.
 

rodm1

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You don't need to bolt it, it isn't going to move. I have a 60 gallon vertical that hasn't moved in years. Had a 40 gallon on the farm that didn't move in 40+ years, never bolted. The 40 gallon was replaced with a 120 gallon horizontal which hasn't moved in 20 years, never bolted either.

You'll be fine be fine not bolting it.....

bob

I have 120gl vertical tank that is about 900lb total and on wheels that hasn't moved. Just give it a wide foot print you shouldn't have any problems.
 

KCarGuy

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My 60 Gallon Compressor came with some Rubber Feet mounted on 4"x4" steel plates.
I drilled and tapped the steel plates and bolted my Feet to those.
The compressor sits freely on the floor.
Its never moved and no vibration, which also makes it even Quiter when its running.

My 1954 Kellogg American 80 gallon sits on 4"x4" pieces of Soft wood.
It has for the last 25 years and that also works great.
 

SgtRauksauff

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got a die grinder and an old tire, and a couple chunks of wood?

P1010687.JPG


absorbs the vibration, quiets that "ringing" just a hair. Has moved less than 1/4" in the 2-ish years I've had it there. Cost me a minute or three to cut the old tire up. Die grinder for the beads, a Sawzall doesn't really work so well.

Granted, this is on a horizontal tank, with feet, I dunno if a vertical tank has feet, or just a big ring with L-brackets that are supposed to bolt to the floor.

--sarge
 
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