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Air Compressor Selection Guide

To select the right air compressor, follow these steps: 1. Add together the cubic feet per minute (cfm) requirements of your pneumatic tools and increase it by 25% to account for additional tools. 2. Note the tool with the highest pressure requirement in pounds per square inch (psig) as your maximum pressure needs. 3. Consider your electrical supply and any storage tank requirements. 4. Take your cfm, pressure, motor, and tank needs to a dealer to find a compressor that meets your requirements and provides good quality.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
273 views2 pages

Air Compressor Selection Guide

To select the right air compressor, follow these steps: 1. Add together the cubic feet per minute (cfm) requirements of your pneumatic tools and increase it by 25% to account for additional tools. 2. Note the tool with the highest pressure requirement in pounds per square inch (psig) as your maximum pressure needs. 3. Consider your electrical supply and any storage tank requirements. 4. Take your cfm, pressure, motor, and tank needs to a dealer to find a compressor that meets your requirements and provides good quality.

Uploaded by

nelson
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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How to Size and Select an Air Compressor

By eHow Contributor

Instructions
1. Pneumatic air tools require a volume of compressed air (expressed as cubic feet per minute,
or cfm) at a specific pressure (expressed as pound-force per square inch gauge, or psig).
The efficiency of a compressor is determined by its cfm and psig ratings, not necessarily its
horsepower. Therefore, you can ignore the horsepower rating when sizing and selecting a
compressor.

2. Gather all of your pneumatic tools together. Write down the required cfm to operate each
tool, as specified by the manufacturer. If you can't find this information, you can look online
for a chart of standard requirements for common pneumatic tools.

3. Add together the cfm requirements of all of the pneumatic tools you plan to run at the same
time. Increase this number by 25% to allow for additional tools, future growth, and eventual
air system leaks.

4. Determine the maximum pressure (psig) needed to run the air tools. You do not need to add
the psig values together like you did the cfm requirements; simply use the value of the tool
that requires the greatest amount of pressure.

5. Be sure the motor characteristics of the compressor are compatible: Is your electrical supply
single-phase or three-phase? What is the voltage? Residential and commercial buildings
usually have single-phase, 115 volt, 60-cycle power, while industrial buildings often have a
three-phase power supply.
6. Small compressors should be used with an air receiver, or storage tank. The receiver stores
compressed air and minimizes the loaded run time of the compressor. The air receiver
should be at least 5 gallons per cfm for optimal results.

7. Take your cfm, maximum pressure, motor characteristics, and receiver size requirements to
your local compressor dealer or home improvement center and compare features among
brands. Keep the quality factor in mind; you will certainly get what you pay for with air
compressors.

Tips & Warnings


• Most single-stage compressors have a maximum pressure rating of 135 psig. Most two-
stage compressors have a maximum pressure rating of 175 psig.
• More horsepower does not always mean a bigger and better compressor. This is because
some compressors are rated at the peak horsepower of the motor and others are rated at
the running horsepower of the motor.

Read more: How to Size and Select an Air Compressor |


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