orezok
Super Member
If you want to determine the true horsepower of a motor, take the running load amps, multiply by voltage to obtain watts. Divide by 746 and you have horsepower.
Is the motor 110v or 220v, mine is a 220v motor that draws I think 16.5 amps, If yours is a 110v motor, it is way over rated, the most you can get from a 110v 15 amp, circut is 1.5 hp.
If you want to determine the true horsepower of a motor, take the running load amps, multiply by voltage to obtain watts. Divide by 746 and you have horsepower.
That would give a very optimistic answer. Divide by 1000 instead of 746 to get a closer answer considering efficiency. This will still be a little optimistic on single phase motors.If you want to determine the true horsepower of a motor, take the running load amps, multiply by voltage to obtain watts. Divide by 746 and you have horsepower.
That would give a very optimistic answer. Divide by 1000 instead of 746 to get a closer answer considering efficiency. This will still be a little optimistic on single phase motors.
larry
That would give a very optimistic answer. Divide by 1000 instead of 746 to get a closer answer considering efficiency. This will still be a little optimistic on single phase motors.
larry
It might be worth it to either get a phase converter for the compressor, or put on a single phase 5 horse motor.
Been around machine shops all my life. We usually have scroll or rotary vane models. Although I've seen some IRand duds, we have one at current job that just got rebuilt with a tad over 55,000 hours. the rebuilt scroll alone was over $7000 installed. This is a 30 hp model. Run it at 125 psi.
My all time favorite is Kaeser. We had 2, 25 hp models at one shop, each with over 25,000 hours and almost never had any problems.
Another favorite is Hydrovane. Although these run at a lower 105 psi setting. I think we had 32,000 hours on the one we bought used at an auction.
Quincy builds good stuff as well as others. You just have to ante up to get into this arena. It all can be worked out into a cost per cfm at your needed psi dollar figure. If you don't need much air, you don't need one of these.
PS, I come home to a small little "buzz" model that annoys the H outta me.:laughing:
I have an oldie but goodie 5hp 3 phase speedaire but no 3 phase here at the house.![]()
If I'm not mistaken, a Speedaire is a rebadged Saylor-Beal, but it could be a Quincy or even a Champion. They all supplied compressor heads to Speedaire. It's easy to tell. Saylor Beal's have many cooling fins closely spaced (like a motorcycle engine) and Quincy has external vave pots with unloader lines attached. Chanpoin has less fins and an aluminum head with a low side to high side finned intercooler and a bulge at the outboard end of the crank where the unloader fits.
I'd look at local auctions and salvage yards for a true 5/1/220. So long as the nameplate amperage draw is in the 25-27 amp range it's a 5 and not a 3 on steroids.
My Quincy has a Century with honest to gosh grease fittings on the armature end housings.
It's very easy to get an offshore copy of a Saylor Beal, Champin or Quincy now. The Chi-com's have copied them all.
It must be the Saylor Beal.....Thanks!
Now if I could just find a nice used motor. I might check a couple of local electric engine shops.
Kyle,
I have heard jet engines called "motors", so is this what an electric engine shop works on?:laughing::laughing:
hugs, Brandi
Kyle, I think Brandi was ribbing you about using the term "electric engine" instead of "electric motor".I'm not sure who it was who originally determined, and don't remember reading why he/she determined, that we have electric "motors" but gasoline/diesel/jet fuel "engines."
I don't think I've made the mistake of calling electric motors an engine, but I've sure called that thing under the hood a "motor" on occasion.But now, if our cars are propelled by "engines" why do we have the "Texas Motor Speedway" and "motor vehicle laws"?:laughing:
I would love a jet engined anything as long as I have someone else to pay the fuel bill.
My friend was given 3 drums of fuel that they drain to test for water during preflight. He heated his barn with it for a good long while. Talk about expensive heat if you had to buy jet fuel...Sump fuel works fine.:thumbsup:
hug, Brandi
Kyle,My friend was given 3 drums of fuel that they drain to test for water during preflight. He heated his barn with it for a good long while. Talk about expensive heat if you had to buy jet fuel...