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Thread: Benchtop air compressors
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8th May 2018, 06:10 PM #1Senior Member
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Benchtop air compressors
Does anyone have any experience with the small benchtop air compressors?
Such as https://sydneytools.com.au/lincoln-l...air-compressor
Are they next to useless for anything except pumping up the tires on a kids bike?
The reason I ask is the only spray gun I own is a crappy electric airless unit which tends to spit rather than spray.
I don't have the room, nor do I spray enough to justify a big or expensive compressor.
Would this be hopeless for trying to spray smaller items like furniture? (as opposed to trying to repaint a house)
I would be keen to experiment spraying varnish/poly etc instead of brushing.
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8th May 2018, 06:26 PM #2Woodworking mechanic
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Common range of CFM requirements for spray guns is 5 to 15 CFM.
https://www.dcjinc.com/wp-content/up...uns-Catlog.pdf
220 litres/min is approx. 7.8 CFM.
So it should suit the range of smaller spray guns.
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8th May 2018, 06:37 PM #3
I have one of these in my mobile turning demonstrating kit
Stanley Wall Mount Air Compressor 0.5HP - 14LPM - Supercheap Auto
I use it for small spray gun at 40psi on my turning projects and it works well
Blackridge Air Spray Gun Touch Up - 200mL - Supercheap Auto
It is also fine for the small nailer and other air tools.
For bigger stuff I'm sure it would struggleNeil____________________________________________Every day presents an opportunity to learn something new
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8th May 2018, 06:57 PM #4SENIOR MEMBER
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I bought the Ryobi AirWave at $199. Worked well... until, I decided I needed an additional Nitto, which started a cascade of crap.
The Manifold is cheap casting which split, then the manifold snapped off flush with the tank, which heat gun fixed, by releasing the thread compound. Spent a few bucks on brass fittings and $60 on a air and moisture filter..A Must Have when painting.
I also suggest an inline filter and pressure regulator At The Gun...I have these two from Supercheap set up as one piece with male and female Nittos, so I add when painting and take off when not..
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8th May 2018, 10:27 PM #5.
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Unfortunately there's a bit more to it than that.
We don't know what the 7.8 CFM refers to. It could be the swept volume of the cylinders with zero back pressure.
What we need to know what pressure the 7.8 CFM is being delivered at.
It's also only a maximum of 116 Psi and has a 6L tank.
Assume it retriggers at 90 PSI that means after losing 6L of air @26 PSI =11 L or 1/3 of a cubic ft at atmosphere. If a spray gun need 5 CFM the tank will last about 4 seconds till it retriggers.
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9th May 2018, 02:52 AM #6
Hi John
that sort of compressor is "designed" to run a nail gun or a 16 or 18 ga bradder or a 23 ga pinner -- one tool at a time -- at a bench. Typical use would be shooting a few nails / brads to make a jig or to hold piece in place while the glue dries.
The online info sort of explains it all
- This machine runs on a standard 240 volt domestic outlet making it ideal for pumping up car tyres, blow-up pools, air mattresses, sporting balls and other sport equipment
- It can alternatively be used for stapling and air-brushing applications and can be used with most small air tools
If you want to spray finish, you need air volume and consistent pressure. 6 litres just won't cut it -- as BobL says, 6 l will last about 4 seconds.
I'm estimating that to spray a table top you need about 30 seconds worth of air.
This could be stored in a much bigger tank, or a combination of larger tank and a compressor designed to deliver 15 CFM continuously. Most (if not all) low cost compressors are designed for intermittent running.regards from Alberta, Canada
ian
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9th May 2018, 02:39 PM #7SENIOR MEMBER
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I'd say yes, it will be hopeless for furniture. For a pen or bowl or a small jewelry box it would probably be ok. The 220 L/min is the pump displacement, the figure to look for is the free air delivery (FAD) and what PSI the FAD is quoted at. Generally the FAD is going to be around 75% of the displacement (don't quote me on that, just what I've observed).
From the information I could gather before I bought a compressor, 200 L/min FAD with a 50L tank tends to be the very minimum you'd look for in a compressor for spraying furniture. Pair it with a LVLP gun and you can get a good ~20s spray time before the compressor kicks in again. The other thing with smaller cheaper compressors is that they are not rated for high duty cycles.
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11th May 2018, 01:52 PM #8Senior Member
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Thanks, for the size of my work a 200mL canister is probably enough.
But forgive my ignorance, I don't understand the numbers.
The spray gun says "minimum 65LPM" but the compressor says "14L/min FAD", whereas link in OP says "220L/min"
Which are the relevant numbers when trying to match a compressor to a gun?
(I understand the point about a small tank emptying in about 4 seconds)
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11th May 2018, 04:05 PM #9
just running the numbers
If the compressor's FAD (free air delivery) is 14 l/min, then the motor would have to work for around 4-1/2 minutes to deliver enough air to power the 65 l/min spray gun for 1 minute. This is only possible via a tank that can store something like 70 litres (or a bit more than 2 cubic feet) of "excess" air at the required pressure.
Please note I've not attempted to consider the effects of pressure, which as air is drawn from the tank will reduce the quantity of available pressurised air.
The best simple analogy might to think of the "usable" air as being the top foot of water in an 8 foot tall water tank.
220 l/min is "believable" on the basis that if the motor could run for a whole minute it could under absolutely perfect conditions deliver 220 litres of air at atmospheric pressure into a pipe that is open at the other end.regards from Alberta, Canada
ian
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11th May 2018, 04:22 PM #10.
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A) spray gun needs that or it won't work properly
B)but the compressor says "14L/min FAD",
C)"220L/min"
I think this is what Ian said it is, meaning it won't be 220 L/in driving a spray gun.
Which are the relevant numbers when trying to match a compressor to a gun?
if the tank is small then the compressor will always be running so then you have to match A and B.
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14th May 2018, 07:49 PM #11Senior Member
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Thanks, this is great, it is making more sense now.
Unfortunately, I really don't want a compressor with big tank, even though you can get them for less than $200.
I happened to see on YouTube the other day a HVLP turbine system (which I didn't even know existed) but I can't find them on sale in Australia. They seem a lot of money to pay for a small footprint.
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14th May 2018, 08:58 PM #12
John,
I had a small SuperCheap compressor (similar to this Blackridge Air Compressor 95LPM 2.0HP Direct Drive - Supercheap Auto) running a Star 106 touch up gun for spraying nitrocellulose lacquer on a medium sized rocking horse. It coped, just, however the compressor was cycling continuously! As Ian has said in practice the numbers in the brochures don't quite stack up.Mobyturns
In An Instant Your Life CanChange Forever
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15th May 2018, 12:07 AM #13Senior Member
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John, HVLP turbine systems are sold here, from Wagner, Graco and possibly others. Like most things, you get what you pay for and four stage turbines aren't cheap. Earlex dual stage were decent and a lot cheaper but I haven't seen them since Wagner took them over.
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7th June 2018, 02:09 PM #14Senior Member
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Hi all, so here is an update:
As as experiment, I've bought a small 36L 115PSI compressor off gumtree, rated for 134L/min FAD.
I will try match this with a small (65Lpm) spray gun.
(I don't know yet what the on/off pressures are but I'll assume 90 / 115 psi.)
If I've done my maths correctly:
Available volume in tank = 36L x (115-90PSI) / 14.7 = 60L air in tank
So if I am spraying at 65 L/min the tank will last almost a minute.
And at 134 L/min FAD, the pump should refill the tank in about half a minute?
So if I spray continuously, the compressor will be able to keep up, but it will be cycling at about 60%?
And if I am spraying for 20 seconds per minute, the compressor will cycle at about 20% (tank will empty in about 3 minutes and then take 30 seconds to refill)?
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7th June 2018, 05:05 PM #15
a 36 litre / 115 psi tank holds 36 litres at 115 psi, which is equivalent to 46 litres at 90 psi.
So if I am spraying at 65 L/min the tank will last almost a minute.
if the gun needs 90 psi, then your 36 litre tank only holds about 10 litres of usable air -- the difference between 36 and 46 litres.
at 65 l/min, your gun would run for about 8 seconds before the tank ran out of air at the required pressure.
And at 134 L/min FAD, the pump should refill the tank in about half a minute?
So if I spray continuously, the compressor will be able to keep up, but it will be cycling at about 60%?
And if I am spraying for 20 seconds per minute, the compressor will cycle at about 20% (tank will empty in about 3 minutes and then take 30 seconds to refill)?
I think I had better get BobL to check my maths.regards from Alberta, Canada
ian
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