1. Registration trouble? Please use the "Contact Us" link at the bottom right corner of the page and your issue will be resolved.
    Dismiss Notice

Compressor Shopping

Discussion in 'The Tool Shed' started by Focker, Oct 2, 2017.

  1. timgr

    timgr We stand on the shoulders of giants. 2022 Sponsor

    A three-prong 115V circuit can be 20 amps, but it has to be the 20A rated socket, and the plug for 20A has one prong rotated 90 degrees. Plugs and sockets with two parallel prongs are rated for 15A - these are lighting outlets.

    1 HP is about 750 watts, so 1500 wats or 13A at 115 V is the minimum current for 2 HP at 100% efficiency. But 100% efficiency is physically impossible, so Quincy specs 19 A, which is about 70% efficient. This is possible, I guess, but seems rather optimistic to me. Maybe ...
     
    Last edited: Oct 7, 2017
  2. timgr

    timgr We stand on the shoulders of giants. 2022 Sponsor

    Do they tell you what amp circuit you need? 5 HP is about 16A at 100% efficiency, but I think they are probably lying about the HP rating. With 50% efficiency, you'd need 32 A ... A 30 A circuit should be ok. You can do that with the orange Romex that is available cheaply at the home center. No plug/socket. Use a 10 ga dryer whip to go between the terminal box on the wall and the compressor. You want stranded wire (like the whip) for the transition from the wall to the compressor - solid wire like Romex will fail from the vibration.

    I think 30A should be enough, but HF calls for a 40A circuit from their stated 23A peak load. If you go with 40A, that's 8ga wire and an 8ga whip. Wire prices seem to make a bog jump from 10 to 8, and you probably won't find 8 ga Romex at your local home center. The 10 ga wire is mass-marketed and seems a lot cheaper.

    BTW that Kobalt is a good option - I read the ad that it is "like" the Home Depot unit. Kobalt is definitely from Lowes. The current compressors from Lowes are made by Campbell-Hausfeld, like this one Air Compressor, 80-Gallon Vertical Two-Stage 14CFM 5HP 208-230V 3PH (CE3001) They say 12.8A, which is impossible for 5 HP at 230V. 12.8A at 230V is 3.9HP at 100% efficiency.
     
    Last edited: Oct 7, 2017
  3. Glenn

    Glenn Kinda grumpy old man Staff Member

    I was concerned about the starting amps actually, more than the running amps, especially since there was a review in which an electrician expressed a concern about the amps. The guys breaker kept tripping on him. If it was a dual voltage motor then wiring for 230 would obviously fix that problem.
     
  4. Glenn

    Glenn Kinda grumpy old man Staff Member

    That description is for 62299 according to the ad. 93274 is shown, why describe one and show another doesn't make sense.
     
  5. timgr

    timgr We stand on the shoulders of giants. 2022 Sponsor

    Mmm. You could run it at 115 on a dedicated circuit at 30A. There is a different plug and socket for for each of those ratings. Given the 19A rating from Quincy, it should have the 5-20 NEMA plug. 20A and 30A receptacles will accept that plug, 15A won't.

    upload_2017-10-7_10-51-43.png
     
  6. Glenn

    Glenn Kinda grumpy old man Staff Member

    Interesting, thanks Tim. I never checked into it further, but I thought 20 amp was the highest household 120 volt current that could be run. (normally)
     
  7. Glenn

    Glenn Kinda grumpy old man Staff Member

    That picture is very helpful. :coffee::)
     
  8. 45es

    45es Active Member 2024 Sponsor 2023 Sponsor 2022 Sponsor

    Tim, this compressor you noted require 3 phase power. Highly doubtful that is available at a residents. Not a good comparison.
     
  9. timgr

    timgr We stand on the shoulders of giants. 2022 Sponsor

    Yes, my mistake. I should have linked to this one. Air Compressor, 80-Gallon Vertical Two-Stage 14CFM 5.5 HP 208-230V 1PH (CE3000)

    The current needs of the 3-phase motor is going to be lower than singlephase, so my claim about the HP is wrong. With a single-phase motor, it's spec'd at 22A. That is 6.74 HP or 5.5HP at 82% efficiency. Still seems unlikely, but it's not blatantly unphysical.
     
    Last edited: Oct 7, 2017
    Focker likes this.
  10. Glenn

    Glenn Kinda grumpy old man Staff Member

    Tim, one thing that hasn't really been discussed is duty cycle. I mentioned it previously figuring someone might discuss it further. What would you consider to be a maximum run time/minimum cool down period for. say a 75% duty cycle?
     
  11. timgr

    timgr We stand on the shoulders of giants. 2022 Sponsor

    Gosh I can only guess. There will be a steady-state demand where the compressor runs 3/4 of the time. If the specs are honest, that should be the same as the spec for how much air the compressor can deliver. For example, when the compressor is delivering, say, 15CFM at 90 psi continuous, the motor should run for 7.5 minutes and be idle for 2.5 minutes. If you knew the compressor set points, the tank volume, and the demand, you should be able to calculate the running time of the nominal duty cycle. But it's an integral equation, because the effective volume of the tank changes as the pressure drops. Certainly if the compressor can't keep up without some significant occasional pause, you are exceeding the duty cycle.

    Thinking of a way to make a WAG... I'll get back to you.
     
  12. Glenn

    Glenn Kinda grumpy old man Staff Member

    This is why I'm wondering how they can list a duty cycle of anything other than 100%....what would be their criteria.
     
  13. Glenn

    Glenn Kinda grumpy old man Staff Member

    I'm also thinking/wondering about this because I would imagine that the longer the running time the cool down time required might increase to being longer than the original 25%.
     
  14. timgr

    timgr We stand on the shoulders of giants. 2022 Sponsor

    All the duty cycle says is that the pump, working into the tank volume and set points, can deliver 33% more air than the spec. Thus it only needs to run 75% of the time to achieve the spec. The larger the tank and the further apart the set points are, the longer the cycle will be, both active and idle.

    They would claim 100% duty cycle if the pump delivered exactly the spec.

    If the spec is 15 CFM at 90 psi, then the pump delivers 15*1.33=20CFM at 90psi. The pump delivers the air at a much higher pressure, then that higher pressure gets diluted by whatever is in the tank. You can use the basic gas law P1 V1 = P2 V2, but that does not consider temperature (of the gas) - this is a big issue.

    Motor temperature is another issue. For me, I never get into the regime where I worry about duty cycle - I just never work that hard. But I don't have a blast cabinet, and I've never painted a whole car at once.
     
  15. Glenn

    Glenn Kinda grumpy old man Staff Member

    Well that's interesting then, I was looking at duty cycle as in winch motors for example. 2 totally different types of duty cycles here. In theory then a compressor with a 75% duty cycle could be better than one with a 100% duty cycle?
     
  16. timgr

    timgr We stand on the shoulders of giants. 2022 Sponsor

    Yeah, according to my interpretation. In theory, a compressor can deliver any volume of air (limited by the tank size and standing pressure) over a short enough time. All you need is a bigger hole for more air. The only rating that makes sense is the one it can maintain.

    Of course, I'm just reasoning my way into this, so I could be mistaken. The specs could mean something else.
     
    Glenn likes this.
  17. Glenn

    Glenn Kinda grumpy old man Staff Member

    Your explanation certainly makes sense to me. I definitely hadn't thought of duty cycle in that way.
     
  18. Focker

    Focker That's a terrible idea...What time? Staff Member

    ITLKSEZ likes this.
  19. timgr

    timgr We stand on the shoulders of giants. 2022 Sponsor

    Glenn and Focker like this.
  20. Glenn

    Glenn Kinda grumpy old man Staff Member

    If you get a tank separately don't forget about the pressure rating. ;)