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That, and you really do need a lot of compressor (and a lot of tank) if you want to get any reasonable use out of a big impact wrench. While I had a couple of 'em (3/8 and 1/2), they gathered dust most of the time.
If I really wanted an impact wrench today, I'd probably get an electric one. |
I love my electric impact from HF. It has been going great for about 6 years now. I would never consider replacing it with a pneumatic impact in a home garage. Hell I can't find a compressor for less then $500 that is not loud as shit.
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Thats why the compressor goes outside.
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I agree, anything at HF with moving parts inside is questionable. I did get the torque wrench, impact sockets, regular 6 point sockets, gear wrenches, and a couple ratchets and have no complaints there.
Yeah I don't expect continuous use out of the little compressor, I'm guessing I'm going to be waiting on it a lot to get the pressure back up with a big impact like that, but it should get by for the small things I do occasionally. What I want eventually is a nice cordless impact. The torque of an air impact (sometimes more) and no cords, can take it to the track. The Milwaukee line kicks ass right now https://www.milwaukeetool.com/power-...rdless/2764-22 |
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I have the compressor below. It is loud as fuck and can't keep up with my die grinder. The whole experience has turned me off the pneumatic tools. I am not in the mood to drop $1000 on a compressor or build an enclosure outside.
https://www.miataturbo.net/attachmen...ine=1448999548 |
my experience with air tools is you need an awesome compressor, and then they are amazing. Otherwise they arent.
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I've been sorta disappointed with my impact. I can loosen bolts much easier with a standard breaker bar (no extension). Maybe it's because my compressor is tiny and shitty.
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Originally Posted by Itty
(Post 1288307)
I've been sorta disappointed with my tiny and shitty compressor
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Originally Posted by shuiend
(Post 1288247)
I have the compressor below. It is loud as fuck and can't keep up with my die grinder. The whole experience has turned me off the pneumatic tools. I am not in the mood to drop $1000 on a compressor or build an enclosure outside.
https://www.miataturbo.net/attachmen...ine=1448999548 |
Originally Posted by shuiend
(Post 1288247)
I have the compressor below. It is loud as fuck and can't keep up with my die grinder. The whole experience has turned me off the pneumatic tools. I am not in the mood to drop $1000 on a compressor or build an enclosure outside.
I'm sure that if I had a 220v compressor with a massive tank, then it would be awesome. Well, relatively awesome... On the other hand, that kind of setup represents a very large investment in both money and space for something that, in >90% of home-hobbyist use, can easily be equaled or outperformed by electrically-powered tools which cost far less, consume vastly less space, and can be used instantaneously and continuously without having to air up the tank. I owned a cheap 5 gal HF compressor for about 12 years. It operated reliably and never gave me any trouble, but nearly every tool I bought for it wound up gathering dust. In the end, I really only ever used it for two things. Filling tires, and using the air nozzle to blow dust out of things. I could do the filling tires job just as well with a $30 tire pump, and while there's no 100% substitute for the nozzle, a shop-vac in reverse is nearly as good for most uses. For wheels, a breaker bar and a cordless drill were much faster and easier (and I'm the kind of guy who *always* uses a torque wrench to tighten lug nuts.) For drilling / grinding / sanding, the compressor was utterly useless and even the best compressor wouldn't have outperformed cheap electrically-powered tools. The air ratchet, IMO, is a gimmick. My take: for the home user, air compressors and air tools are vastly over-rated. The *only* reasons I'd buy another would be if I had a specific need to use an air-nailer for framing / roofing work, if I was doing high-volume riveting, or if I were to get serious about painting. And, ironically, the very cheapest compressors are perfectly adequate for two of those three uses. |
Originally Posted by Itty
(Post 1288307)
I've been sorta disappointed with my impact. I can loosen bolts much easier with a standard breaker bar (no extension). Maybe it's because my compressor is tiny and shitty.
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Just saw this video with a poverty compressor
:rofl: holy balls that's weak Someone in the comments mentioned premium or high flow couplers/fittings make a big difference True or BS? |
Originally Posted by Joe Perez
(Post 1288313)
This way my experience as well.
I'm sure that if I had a 220v compressor with a massive tank, then it would be awesome. Well, relatively awesome... On the other hand, that kind of setup represents a very large investment in both money and space for something that, in >90% of home-hobbyist use, can easily be equaled or outperformed by electrically-powered tools which cost far less, consume vastly less space, and can be used instantaneously and continuously without having to air up the tank. I owned a cheap 5 gal HF compressor for about 12 years. It operated reliably and never gave me any trouble, but nearly every tool I bought for it wound up gathering dust. In the end, I really only ever used it for two things. Filling tires, and using the air nozzle to blow dust out of things. I could do the filling tires job just as well with a $30 tire pump, and while there's no 100% substitute for the nozzle, a shop-vac in reverse is nearly as good for most uses. For wheels, a breaker bar and a cordless drill were much faster and easier (and I'm the kind of guy who *always* uses a torque wrench to tighten lug nuts.) For drilling / grinding / sanding, the compressor was utterly useless and even the best compressor wouldn't have outperformed cheap electrically-powered tools. The air ratchet, IMO, is a gimmick. My take: for the home user, air compressors and air tools are vastly over-rated. The *only* reasons I'd buy another would be if I had a specific need to use an air-nailer for framing / roofing work, if I was doing high-volume riveting, or if I were to get serious about painting. And, ironically, the very cheapest compressors are perfectly adequate for two of those three uses. |
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Originally Posted by aidandj
(Post 1288344)
A 1/4 grinder far outperforms a dremel.
For heavy work (eg, head porting) there are heavy-duty electric grinders such as this one, with Harbor Freight and Kawasaki versions at half the price for casual use: https://www.miataturbo.net/attachmen...ine=1449031357 And for delicate work, nothing beats a hanging flex-shaft grinder with foot-pedal control: https://www.miataturbo.net/attachmen...ine=1449031357 I get that air tools have their place. In a production environment, where you can justify the cost of a rotary screw compressor and a big aftercooler, they're the shit. When I worked at Harris, we had a shop-air system rivaled only by Boeing. And when you were building TV trucks that required endless grinding and cutting (including chopping the frame of a Ford F-450 in half and lengthening it), or assembling a big 300lb, 64-fader audio console which required a metric shit-ton of rivets to assemble, it was an awesome thing to have. But air tools in the home environment are little more than a trophy. Air is a horribly inefficient means of transmitting power, and the capital cost to install a compressor capable of doing useful work is extremely high as compared to the cost of direct-powered alternatives, without providing any meaningful benefit. |
Originally Posted by Slider
(Post 1288062)
1/2" Impact ... Anyone have one?
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Harbor Freight Win-or-Fail Thread
My HF Earthquake 1/2" impact has been great for 7 or 8 years of use so far. It will make enough torque to break factory lug studs if you turn it up. I tighten lug nuts on setting 3 out of 6.
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I picked up a big electric grinder today to try out since I hate my pneumatic die grinder. I will test out how well it does porting a turbo sometime soon.
https://www.miataturbo.net/attachmen...ine=1449087841 |
Originally Posted by shuiend
(Post 1288569)
I picked up a big electric grinder today to try out since I hate my pneumatic die grinder. I will test out how well it does porting a turbo sometime soon.
Given that Chevy V8 heads are cast out of pure osmium, if it's good enough to port one of those, it's probably good enough to port a turbine housing. |
The HF 1/4" electric die grinder is great. I've used mine a lot and I'm still on the original brushes. Stay away from their bits. Just pure garbage.
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Originally Posted by Slider
(Post 1288317)
Someone in the comments mentioned premium or high flow couplers/fittings make a big difference
True or BS? |
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