portable air ... revisited

Ursidae69

Traveller
I need to get a small back up compressor to compliment my CO2. I will not be getting one of these MF compressors. Seems to be a few people reporting issues with them. As a FYI on the CO2, the company provides data on the # of fill ups. For my 10 gallon CO2 tank, I generally can fill around 20-25 33" tires from ~15-35psi.
 

WJinTRSC

Adventurer
I'm new to in-vehicles compressors and CO2 tanks and know little but wanting to learn more. In the coming months, i hope to build a rear bumper for the WJ and wanted to incorporate my own tank in the bumper w/ rect. tubing and welded end caps. I can drill/tap for fittings and a reg. and it should make a decent source for CO2. If I just have a good "tank" like that w/ above hardware, then is that enough to have a sensible means of air? I mainly want it for inflating tires and occasionally tools or whatever else it may come in handy for. What concerns should I have or what may I be forgetting? Thanks in advance, and sorry if I'm stealing the thread, but I'm sure there are others out there w/ same question.
 

Kilroy

Adventurer
I go to a welding shop and they fill a 10 lb for about $12. I think a 20 is only slightly more. I checked a fire extinguisher place and they we're significantly more.

Desertdude said:
fyi; The fire extinguisher place about 45 mins from where I live charges 28.00 for 20 lbs - after a few trips there and back, it adds up to a compressor real fast :)
 

crawler#976

Expedition Leader
WJinTRSC said:
I'm new to in-vehicles compressors and CO2 tanks and know little but wanting to learn more. In the coming months, i hope to build a rear bumper for the WJ and wanted to incorporate my own tank in the bumper w/ rect. tubing and welded end caps. I can drill/tap for fittings and a reg. and it should make a decent source for CO2. If I just have a good "tank" like that w/ above hardware, then is that enough to have a sensible means of air? I mainly want it for inflating tires and occasionally tools or whatever else it may come in handy for. What concerns should I have or what may I be forgetting? Thanks in advance, and sorry if I'm stealing the thread, but I'm sure there are others out there w/ same question.

You will not be able to fill a bumper with liquid CO2 - tanks must be hydrotest certified to contain it. With liquid CO2 in a tank, the gas above the liquid is compressed to roughly 800 PSI, and I've seen my 20LB tank register over 900 PSI after being heated in direct sunlight.

The best a bumper can do for you is act as a storage tank for compressed air - essentially a buffer for your compressor. It won't store enough air at 100 PSI to fill 4 tires - I doubt if it would fill much more than one or two at best. It will allow you to run an air tool for a short time tho, even if your using a small compressor like my Viair 400 that can only sustain an output of 1.3 CFM at 100 PSI.

I have both CO2 and a portable compressor. My old trail rig has a 20LB CO2 cylinder on it, and I carry a Viair in the Taco. Upfront cost are similar. The CO2 tank cost me about $200.00 including a good regulator and coil type 25' hose. The Viair was $229.69 from Summit Racing - complete with storage bag.

The CO2 system has a reoccuring cost of $18.00 per tank, and I get roughly 30 tires per tank (35/12.5-15 MT/R's from 6 PSI to 22 PSI) or roughly $0.60 per tire. It has some major advantages over the Viair - it can reseat a tire bead very easily, run an impact wrench or air ratchet, or anything else you can do with a large shop compressor, albiet for a relatively short time. I've averaged two refills a year on the CO2 tank for the last 6 years - roughly $240.00 with taxs...

The Viair provides "free" air, but can't easily reseat a bead or run tools.

Both systems are handy, but I'm keeping the Viair and selling the CO2 system with the beater...

Mark
 

WJinTRSC

Adventurer
WOW!!! Thank you SO much for that explanation!!! I appreciate it so much, and now I finally understand CO2 systems so much better and now I can proceed appropriately w/ my bumper plans w/ applicable info.. Thanks again and have a good one! That's what makes this forum awesome.
 

MountainBiker

Experience Seeker
Tucson T4R said:
Now you tell me! I just bought one of those Master Flow 1052s at Costco today. I says it has 3 year warranty so you should be able to take it back. I'm hoping mine lasts longer than your experience.
The manufacturer provides the 3 year warranty. But Costco has a return policy that lasts a lifetime: http://www.costco.com/Service/FeaturePageLeftNav.aspx?ProductNo=11204333
"Merchandise: We guarantee your satisfaction on every product we sell with a full refund. Exceptions: Televisions, projectors, computers, cameras, camcorders, iPOD / MP3 players and cellular phones must be returned within 90 days of purchase for a refund."
 

LexusAllTerrain

Expedition Leader
MountainBiker said:
The manufacturer provides the 3 year warranty. But Costco has a return policy that lasts a lifetime: http://www.costco.com/Service/FeaturePageLeftNav.aspx?ProductNo=11204333
"Merchandise: We guarantee your satisfaction on every product we sell with a full refund. Exceptions: Televisions, projectors, computers, cameras, camcorders, iPOD / MP3 players and cellular phones must be returned within 90 days of purchase for a refund."


Very good!:chowtime:
 

Tucson T4R

Expedition Leader
MountainBiker said:
The manufacturer provides the 3 year warranty. But Costco has a return policy that lasts a lifetime: http://www.costco.com/Service/FeaturePageLeftNav.aspx?ProductNo=11204333
"Merchandise: We guarantee your satisfaction on every product we sell with a full refund. Exceptions: Televisions, projectors, computers, cameras, camcorders, iPOD / MP3 players and cellular phones must be returned within 90 days of purchase for a refund."


Sweet, even better then. Thanks
 

MaddBaggins

Explorer
I feel that air is important and therefore I have 3 options in my rig at all times.
I have a 10lb Co2 tank which cost me $14 per fill at the local fire protection supplier ( United Fire on 4th ave for those in Tucson). Thats the fastes option but I tend to save it for things like reseating tires. I have a Costco masterflow which will fill my 315's from 15psi to 40psi in 6 minutes each. and I have also plumbed my ARB compressor with an airchuck and can use it as a last resort ( very slow fill time).
 

Forum statistics

Threads
189,512
Messages
2,917,706
Members
232,442
Latest member
rumpityz28
Top