CK5
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I have the ARB twin compressor with a 5 gallon tank. The compressor maintains the system at 150psi. I have a regulator on the line I use for airing up tires set to 90psi. I don't get far into airing up the first 37" tire and the compressor kicks on and is running from then until I finish. It may take a little longer to fill all 4 tires than it did with the CO2, but not by much. I think the one time I timed it, it was about 2min-30sec per tire to fill from 12psi to 30psi.

In thinking back on filling tires, I think the needle generally holds about 40-60psi while I'm filling. Disclaimer being I don't know if the pressure on the dial at the inflator is accurate while filling.

Sorry I don't have math numbers but I thought maybe some real world experience would help process the numbers.


Thanks for that! :waytogo:

I found some good spec tables on the VIAIR website that converted CFM to Liters/Minute.... that was easy enough to convert to Gallons/Min.

From that original CK5 thread, I was able to do a rough estimate of tire volume on my 38's.... 42 Gallons per tire at sea level. :yikes:

It sounds bad, but it's not really. If I was trying to get from say 12psi trail pressure to a likely road pressure of 25psi... I need 151 Gallons of air from the compressor / tank setup.

At the pressures I'd be working at, the VIAIR 400C will put out 16 Gallons per minute... and if I use 2 compressors I can fill all 4 tires (from 12 to 25psi) in just under 5 minutes.

(This assumes there is NO air tank in the system.... this is just 2 compressors pumping straight into the tires)

Where I'm stuck now is finding some kind of conversion that will explain how to convert a 2 Gallon air tank (@ 120psi) to a pressure like 25psi to understand how much effect it will have on those 151 gallons I need.... presumably, the tank will dump it's pressure just about instantly, and the compressors will then need to fill not only the remaining air needed for the tires, but will also have to "backfill" the 2 gallons of missing air from the tank once it purges itself into the tires??? :thinking:


Anyway, I feel like I'm getting pretty close to the answer.... I just need to find the next formula.


-G
 
The York will run air tools without a tank.
The math has been done the research has been done. No need to waste time on figuring out any thing but where to mount the tank.

I am helping you save time :)


Unfortunately, it FAILS my aesthetic requirement.

I'm not installing a big, clunky YORK in my beautiful engine bay. :)


-G
 
Not to belabor your thoughts but I wonder at what point the air line size is the actual limiting factor? Most accordian lines that I've seen are a 1/4" line and will only flow so much. You can increase SCFM, tank storage etc. but when does the line size keep you from filling faster?

I have a typical rol-air twin tank construction type compressor as my garage compressor. It's not a killer large compressor by any means and it a total of 9 gal. of storage at 140 psi, when filling tires it's working the whole time. Just as an example. It's either a 7.3 SCFM at 90 PSI or 8.2 as I don't recall what the motor size is.

You might consider what a standard 1/4" air hose and tire chuck will flow and just make sure the compressor is supplying that plus some at say 40psi. Running air tools is a thing of the past IMO since battery powered tools are getting so good, battery impacts, grinders, etc. are too easy to have around now.

For a matter of practicality the twin ARB compressors kick ass, couple that with a few gallons of air storage and rock on. Spend brain power on other things.
 
Your calculation fails because all that air has to go through a 3/8" line.

Ya know, I could actually film the filling of a tire with either.

And who ya calling ugly? :)
 
Your calculation fails because all that air has to go through a 3/8" line.
Ya know, I could actually film the filling of a tire with either.
And who ya calling ugly? :)

This was my next concern. I drilled out my valve cores to a larger size to increase flow, but your point about the line sizing is definitely valid. :waytogo:



Not to belabor your thoughts but I wonder at what point the air line size is the actual limiting factor? Most accordian lines that I've seen are a 1/4" line and will only flow so much. You can increase SCFM, tank storage etc. but when does the line size keep you from filling faster?

I have a typical rol-air twin tank construction type compressor as my garage compressor. It's not a killer large compressor by any means and it a total of 9 gal. of storage at 140 psi, when filling tires it's working the whole time. Just as an example. It's either a 7.3 SCFM at 90 PSI or 8.2 as I don't recall what the motor size is.

You might consider what a standard 1/4" air hose and tire chuck will flow and just make sure the compressor is supplying that plus some at say 40psi. Running air tools is a thing of the past IMO since battery powered tools are getting so good, battery impacts, grinders, etc. are too easy to have around now.

For a matter of practicality the twin ARB compressors kick ass, couple that with a few gallons of air storage and rock on. Spend brain power on other things.


Brandon,

Agree. It may not seem relevant to where I should be spending my time but it really IS actually.

My new punchlist requires me to run all my fuel lines, brake lines and air lines... and I need to find a home for an airtank somewhere in the limited remaining space. I can easily fit a 1 gallon....or two 1 gallon tanks. A centrally mounted 2 or 2.5 gallon tank is directly above the rear driveshaft (which feels uncomfortable to me for some reason) but it looks like it will fit. The VIAIR compressors are tiny and I can hide them behind the rear bedside trim panels (assuming they are quiet enough)... I also have a few larger spaces underneath that would work... and if I went with a larger electric compressor like an OASIS or ExtremeOutbackProducts my mounting options are more limited due to their size. (Cost is stupid also -> BTW). I like the idea of two small-ish compressors running in tandem since they split the work, and if one ever failed I can still use my ARB lockers and fill my tires (albeit slower) until I had a chance to swap the bad part out.

Ultimately, I'm just trying to convince myself about what parts I need to order so that I don't spend time fighting for valuable frame space unless it really provides some value.



-G
 
Not sure how much help this is, but I've got a 5gal portable tank that I use to air up smaller tires. 215/50-15's I think. and I can do all 4 from about 5-10 up to 26 on 1 fill. With the tank at 90psi - it drops to about 35-40 psi...
 
Ya know, if you're all concerned about looks and weight - you could go true old school

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for the pups, you remove a spark plug, connect the hose and fill your tires.... it's not too explosive.
 
Ya know, if you're all concerned about looks and weight - you could go true old school

attachment.php


for the pups, you remove a spark plug, connect the hose and fill your tires.... it's not too explosive.



LOL..... yeah that vaporized fuel mixture pumped into the tire would be amazing for re-seating a blown bead!!!

-G
 
Line size, think low rider air bag trucks, the larger the lines you run to the air bags the quicker you can dump and fill each bag. I'd do 1/2" air line. It is a pretty common size on most big rigs for a lot of the air system.
 
Line size, think low rider air bag trucks, the larger the lines you run to the air bags the quicker you can dump and fill each bag. I'd do 1/2" air line. It is a pretty common size on most big rigs for a lot of the air system.


The valvestem core (and in my case, the rotating union inside the portal boxes) are the choke point that I need to worry about....


-G
 
I forgot you have the CTIS deal.

I still say your going to be at 95% of perfect just getting the ARB twin comp. (Or equivilent other brand) 2 gallons or more of storage and call it done. Plumb in several isolation valves so that when the compressors go down you can isolate just the ARB's and use a small CO2 tank to run them.

I understand your path and why it all matters in the long game. But I think you've already determined that two 1 gallon tanks work, then I bet the size differences of the compressors is minor. Much more beyond this is letting you DOC (see I put those letters out of order to cause a massive brain malfunction) take over.:flipoff7:
 
Ya know, if you're all concerned about looks and weight - you could go true old school

attachment.php


for the pups, you remove a spark plug, connect the hose and fill your tires.... it's not too explosive.

LOL..... yeah that vaporized fuel mixture pumped into the tire would be amazing for re-seating a blown bead!!!

-G

I remember being on the farm in OK with my Grandpa and having to top one of the tires on the truck off with the bed mounted propane tank. We did that several times that summer, I was young enough I had no clue, I thought it was just like air, even though the truck ran off of it. Hehehe, holy shit I could have died. And we at one point had the ole' take out the spark plug and fill the tire adapter as well.
 
I remember being on the farm in OK with my Grandpa and having to top one of the tires on the truck off with the bed mounted propane tank. We did that several times that summer, I was young enough I had no clue, I thought it was just like air, even though the truck ran off of it. Hehehe, holy shit I could have died. And we at one point had the ole' take out the spark plug and fill the tire adapter as well.

beat the snot out of walking or riding horses....
 
Wasn't there discussion at one point about using the cage as the air tank? Or am I remembering something different?
 
Wasn't there discussion at one point about using the cage as the air tank? Or am I remembering something different?

It was a long time ago. But now the tube is going to be plum full of wires for mood lighting, solar panel cables to power his under seat servers, so probably some cat 5, maybe some liquid nitrogen tubing for radiant air conditioning. You know, normal stuff.
 
It was a long time ago. But now the tube is going to be plum full of wires for mood lighting, solar panel cables to power his under seat servers, so probably some cat 5, maybe some liquid nitrogen tubing for radiant air conditioning. You know, normal stuff.

That was supposed to be a secret... shhh!!


:haha:

-G
 
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