CK5
Register an account today to become a member! Once signed in, you'll be able to participate on this site by adding your own topics and posts, as well as connect with other members.

Large compressor location

BowtieBlazer

Diesel Powered
Joined
Jul 15, 2001
Posts
2,470
Reaction score
2
Location
Baton Rouge, Louisiana
I need advice on where to mount a large compressor. Say 60-80gal range. I don't have a shop just a small 6x11 tool shed attached to the carport. I hate to mount it in there because of lack of breathing room and its hot in there already. I was thinking maybe the rafters in the attic above the carport and just drop a roll up air line. Besides noise in the house when it kicks on, and being harder to service, any other drawbacks? The attic has a ridge vent and atleast there it could breath Nothing within 20ft of it in all directions except up
 
Build an area for it outside. You can insulate it for noise and freezing temps. Vent traps(or whatever they are called) can be put in the top and botom to keep airflow around it.
 
All you really need down here is a cover to keep the rain off. My dad's shop has a tin "roof" mounted on a 2X4 frame that keeps the compressor out of the rain. Slant it down from the back of the house and put the compressor under it on a small concrete pad. Wire it through the wall into the workroom.
 
outside!...

I'd mount it outside on a pallet,or skids,,and build a cover over it,or put a small "doghouse" over it..having a compressor inside the garage is a PITA,its noisy,and wastes space..nothing worse than trying to carry on a conversation and having the compressor kick on!..I've almost had a few disasters at shops I worked at,when I would yell for someone to kill an engine because something was leaking,etc,and they couldn't hear me thanks to the compressor running..:doah:

I'd say a house attic is no place for it either..it'd shake the rafters loose after awhile,drive everone in the house nuts,and its pretty hot in most attics,not the best environment for it..plus a compressor tank that size weighs 400+ pounds!--got a crane to hoist it up there??...:crazy:
 
chevyfumes said:
I put an exaust fan in the ceiling of my comp room and a cold air intake along the bottom of the wall.
And run an open refridgerator as well...??


Hadn't given much thought to the doghouse add on to the back wall on the extra slab. hum... great idea....I didn't like the rafter idea but couldn't think of much else. I'm sure with normal use it'll be okay to the humidity elements?
 
I have a small 20 gal oilless direct drive and it was loud as hell. I put it under my workbench with a remote power switch and a remote drain with a ball valve at the end of copper tubing. I put ceiling tile around it on top of 1/8 inch wood. This significantly lowered the sound level.

P1020460 (Small).JPG
 
Last edited:

Latest Posts

Top Bottom