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Tandem Air Compressors

Jeff May

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 1, 2012
Messages
343
Location
Fayetteville, PA
I currently have a 60 gal single stage air compressor in my shop. I just picked up another 60 gal unit. Not the same make, but similar in cfms. I was wondering if any one has ever hooked air compressors in tandem and what was the results.
I was thinking this could be good for when I use my blast cabinet as the single unit just doesn't quite keep up.
So,
Has any one ever done this?
Is it worth it?
If so, how did you plumb them and wire them?
Thanks,
Jeff in Hagerstown
 
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Hankoh

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 27, 2011
Messages
52
Location
Northwest Ohio
I have used two compressors piped together for exactly what you need (more CFM for blasting). I just used a "tee" to connect the output hoses from each of the two compressors, and the third side of the tee to the blaster. Just turn on both compressors and that is it. My two compressors were set similarly (on/off points on the switches controlling the compressors). It worked fine for me. The compressors would turn on and off at slightly different times (the pressure switches are not at exactly the same point - mine are not finely accurate) but that doesn't matter.

John
 

marineengineer

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 2, 2012
Messages
77
Location
Vermont
In an industrial setting we have lead lag set up with much larger compressors it should work for you also. For example one would be set 150-130 and the other 115-150
 

gearhead9056

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 22, 2011
Messages
75
Location
SE South Dakota
I think it would be a good deal for blasting, we thought of doing something similar at the farm until my dad got a deal on a bigger compressor. You could adjust the switches and get them to turn on pretty close I would think

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The Cobbler

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Staff member
Joined
Oct 24, 2013
Messages
25,970
Location
Niagara Region, Ontario, Canada
I have had regulators bleed air if they are at different set points, so be sure to get them as close as possible to the same outlet pressures. or on the secondary compressor tie in before the regulator so you send the tank pressure to the tank pressure of the main compressor .
 
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hoffman912

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 21, 2011
Messages
418
Location
Columbus, Ohio
question, what specs (cfm, psi) do you have now thats not working for blasting, and what should one have? I am looking at getting a compressor down the road, but id rather get one compressor, not two...
 

holdover

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 15, 2011
Messages
750
Location
VA
I have two Husky 60 gal. I have valves on both and they are t-ed into the distribution line can use one or both for blasting etc. No problems plus I don't have all my eggs in the same basket which might leave me without an air supply. Bought the first one on sale 2 yrs ago last year they changed their color from red to black and put the red ones on sale for 100.00 less
 

sberry

Banned
Joined
Jun 18, 2005
Messages
35,747
Location
Brethren, Michigan
I finally realized there was no point in leaving the secondary on 24/7 when I am not using it, we use the tanks and I can turn the breaker on if I head out to demand air.
Other than sandblast I can meet my real max demand with about real 5 hp unit. I have a 3 main and with the extra tank meet it easy. I can time it to squeeze the trigger just before kickoff and sand more than I want to without kicking on number 2.

Some of these pics are old, there have since been revisions. Drains plumbed on etc.
 

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