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Hey everyone,
Got a non working 80? Gallon from a buddy, it's missing some pieces, I'm hoping someone here can help me figure out what it needs to be operational again. I've never worked on one before so I dont know what things are called so bear with me.....
It's missing on the motor in 2 spots whatever goes under the rounded covers.
This next piece hose a small white hose broken off in the switch.
start by taking the belt off and turning both the motor and the compressor by hand. Makesure they both turn smoothly. If the motor turns smoothly you might be able to spend $50 on capacitors and maybe it’ll work...i would lean toward just buying a new motor from harbor freight or something. If the compressor turns freely you should be able to hear/feel as it compresses and exhausts.
if you got a drill big enough to chuck up to the either the existing motor or the shaft on the compressor you could maybe run it that way just to test the compressor. I would be reluctant to do much with it until i knew the compressor was working,
That white thats broken off...that component is a pressure switch. It’s going to be on a hard fitting to the tank...when the pressure is high enough it turn the 7nit off, low enough it turns it on. The broken bit is for a hose but no idea what it would be for...you should be able to remove and cap it.
Motor spins free and easy, compressor hooked up to my drill created some air in tank, gauge won't move so not sure about that. Will a bad compressor put a little air and then stop?
A compressor is basically just an engine without a spark plug. It's got a piston and rings and valves and just pumps the air into the tank rather than burning it like a gas engine.
If it's pumping some air it's probably fine.
That motor is a Century 182711
Current cross reference is Century B385
You'll likely need to call a motor shop to get the capacitor values if you want to use that motor.
The broken little white hose is an unloader, it helps the compressor start when there is air in the tank, otherwise it's fighting against the air pressure trying to start up which is a real strain on the motor.
A lot of times the compressor head has a built in unloader and you don't need that one (aftermarket pressure switch most likely). You'll know once you've got it running. If it starts up easily when the tank is empty and really struggles or stalls when the tanks is pressurized then it will need to be plumbed in. Won't hurt anything to run without it for testing, just shut it down if you hear it struggling too much or you could blow the breaker/fry stuff.
FWIW, I wouldn't go less than actual 5hp and really do 10hp if you have the scratch. If you're running on a 230 20amp circuit anyway, you might as well go with the bigger motor.
FWIW, I wouldn't go less than actual 5hp and really do 10hp if you have the scratch. If you're running on a 230 20amp circuit anyway, you might as well go with the bigger motor.
Won't do any good to go oversize without speeding up the pump which is probably not a good idea on an unknown compressor head.
As long as your motor will spin at 3450 rpm with the load there's no reason to go higher.
The vast majority of these generic head compressors run on a 3hp motor that's labeled 5HP or 6HP.
The output of the compressor has 0 to do with the motor size and 100% to do with the compressor head, other than with a larger motor you can run a larger compressor head.
On the same head at the same RPM you can put a 3hp or a 300hp and get the same air (so long as the 3hp can run the head)
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