Compressor Revisited
Reginald P. Smithers III wrote:
basskisser wrote:
Harry Krause wrote:
Amazon got my new Makita compressor to me today, as promised, in two
delivery days, and without charging me for shipping.
It arrived in a sturdy, padded cardboard box via FEDEX. No damage.
So, I opened the pressure and regulator valves, poured in the oil and
let it run for its 20-minute break-in, per the manual. Yes, I RTFM.
It's very quiet, much more quiet than any other similar compressor I
have encountered. Makita was not lying. Seems to be nicely made, too.
Now, I have a set of Porter Cable accessories, but I don't seem to have
any nylon tape around. I presume, and this is my question, that one
still needs to use nylon tape on air tool screw-in fittings? Or has
technology changed?
I would certainly use Teflon tape. I hate leaks.
Bassy,
So would I, but I can't think of any reason it is neccessary, which was
Harry's question. The leak would be so little, I don't think the leak
would impact on the funtionality of the tool or the compressor. Unless
you were keeping the compressor on you would never notice the tiny leak
around the threads.
--
Reggie
That's my story and I am sticking to it!
Valid points all. Here's another one. Suppose Harry wants to keep the
compressor at the ready all the time. Wouldn't he want to keep things
as leak free as possible?
That's my story and I will change it if necessary.
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