Wednesday, August 8, 2007

RE: [papercreters] Compressor size for leisurly pace? -was- Re: My Foam House

We used an old large water pressure tank for many years on a framing crew.  Also you could add one or two service station air pigs in series.

 

Nick

 


From: papercreters@yahoogroups.com [mailto:papercreters@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of Greg House
Sent: Wednesday, August 08, 2007 12:36 PM
To: papercreters@yahoogroups.com
Subject: Re: [papercreters] Compressor size for leisurly pace? -was- Re: My Foam House

 


From: slurryguy <slurryguy@yahoo.com>

>I'm not an expert in spraying mortar or using a tirolessa, but I

>wonder if you really need such a big compressor, Nelda.

I'm not either, but from watching videos of the morter sprayers and reading specs for commercial products, it would appear to me that they use a lot of air. That generally means a big compressor (and therefore, big $$).

>I wonder if in your personal situation if you could get by with a

>significantly smaller compressor than normal and a reasonably large

>air tank.

Sounds like a good theory, but where would you get the tank? I don't see a lot of small HP compressors on the market with large tanks. Maybe 20-30gal or so for a 2-3 HP unit tops.

>The big compressors give someone the advantage of being able to spray

>and spray and spray with few breaks all day long. Do you anticipate

>working at that pace?

You may risk exceeding the duty cycle on a small compressor by requiring it to fill a very large tank. If that's the case, it won't last as long and you'll void your warranty.

I had another idea for a "budget" spray setup. Harbor Freight sells the raw compressor pumps, without motors or tanks (like Item # 93786, 93785). It seems to me that you could rig one of these up with a motor (maybe an electric motor like Item # 3094, or a gasoline engine from a lawn mower or something) so that it just ran continuously while you sprayed. When you needed to mix more morter or take a break, you just shut the engine off. I'm not sure what you'd do with the "excess air" it produced if you didn't have a tank, perhaps the regulator would just dump it?

Greg

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