oisiaa
Well-known member
- Joined
- May 12, 2024
- Threads
- 14
- Messages
- 186
- Reaction score
- 256
- Location
- California
- Vehicles
- 2018 Model 3 LR RWD, 2021 Model 3 LR
It is not running at tank pressure. I keep the tank pressurized and the initial inrush quickly fills the tire until equalized at which point the compressor is running at tire pressure. Your pump looks good too, but is much more expensive. I also use a 4-tire manifold hose setup.Why are you guys buying compressors with air tanks for filling tires? It makes no sense!
My 120V compressor fits neatly in the little side compartment that you have your air hose in and fills tires a lot faster. An air tank is very sub-optimal because it forces the compressor to work at the pressure the air tank is at instead of the actual pressure in the tires as you fill them. You will fill much faster and with less heating of the compressor and less battery drain if you eliminate the pressure tank (the tire is basically a big pressure tank). It will also consume less space and weight less without the undesireable air tank.
This will fill all four of Cybertruck's All-Terrain tires simultaneously from 30 psi to 50 psi in four minutes total when used with an air hose designed to connect to all four tires simultaneously:
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Plus, it's very quiet and solid running. You can turn it to 50% speed to fill one tire and it's even quieter. I've used it many times and it appears to be a solid little compressor.
Why pressurize more air than you actually need? If you need a tank to run a higher powered pneumatic air tool, you can always plumb a tank inline with this little compressor.
The compressor is only running at tank pressure for like 10-15 seconds until the tank is equalized with the tire.
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