My Yong Heng died again

My pump started acting goofy as I was watching the gauge as I was filling my tank. The pressure was almost up to 300 bar when all of a sudden the pressure started rapidly falling in the opposite direction. My hour meter had 18.4 hours on it so I knew I was getting close to needing a high pressure side rebuild as my fill times had greatly increased. I tore the compressor apart and found that the brass high pressure piston was severely scratched on one side and the piston rings were hard and brittle. I've been down this road a few times before and had previously purchased 4 piston and gasket kits from Ali Express.

So I drained the crankcase, removed the cover, wiped the sediment out and replaced the piston. Upon reassembly I discovered that the crankcase cover gasket had shrank in overall size. It would no longer fit into the groove around the cover. I tried warming it up and stretching it but it wouldn't stay large enough to fit upon assembly. Therefore I removed the rubber gasket, cleaned both surfaces and applied no-name black RTV silicone sealant (purchased at Harbor Freight). I allowed it to cure for 48 hours, filled the crankcase with Campbell-Hausfield synthetic compressor oil and fired up the compressor. I had air, yay.

The new piston was not balanced as well as the previous one and I had twice the vibration and much louder noise level. After about 10 minutes of run time several oil leaks appeared around the crankcase gasket so I shut it down. Drained the oil and removed the cover to find that the RTV had several places where it was still gooey and not set up so that was the source of the leaks. The new oil was black and extremely contaminated. Cleaned everything and sealed the cover again with red Permatex RTV this time. I will allow it to cure for 3 days before I fire it up again.

So in the interim I am weighing my options. Do I want to keep going down this road and repairing a ticking time bomb or bite the bullket and upgrade to a more reliable and more expensive compressor. The Alkin would be the dream compressor but not really wanting to spend that much. The Coltri MCH6 and Omega Air Charger are both high on my consideration list but both are spendy as well. The rabbit hole keeps getting deeper ...
 
  • Like
Reactions: RM.510bigbore
That’s a tough decision! Seems like that Air Charger is an under the radar no frills compressor that I have seen some pretty decent user reviews here on AGN. I see AoA has the Air Charger back in stock on their website, it’s been unavailable for quite some time. But since I am spending your money here, the Coltri is just a grand more😂.
 
  • Wow
Reactions: DesertSilver
I just go on allies press and for $115.00 buy the kit with upper and lower cylinder new head piston everything. I'd fix the yong heng. I would still buy another compressor or booster if you want. I think I'm just going too keep 2 yong heng and get a booster pump from altros. Yong Heng are a pain for sure!!! Nessary evil... I work on mine pretty consistently. Always nice to have a spare
 
I just go on allies press and for $115.00 buy the kit with upper and lower cylinder new head piston everything. I'd fix the yong heng. I would still buy another compressor or booster if you want. I think I'm just going too keep 2 yong heng and get a booster pump from altros. Yong Heng are a pain for sure!!! Nessary evil... I work on mine pretty consistently. Always nice to have a spare
Doesn't that just fall in line with the PCP experience? I mean it seems as if I'm working on my pcps all the time.
 
  • Like
Reactions: MI_Yeti
Yes you are correct!!!! I'm always working on my yong heng if its isn't broke my Texan is. I do believe from my limited experience if your into pcp's you better be mechanical inclined or have some deep pockets!!! Pcp are definitely a tinkering thing requiring attention.... You are wise beyond your years friend
 
  • Like
Reactions: Camaro454
Although I've yet to use any of them since i got the Bauer. I have major issue with air anxiety 😵‍💫. A backup is always good to have. I have 4 of them, a cordless GXL3 compressor for the field, a jb air tank with free refills from jb, my double hand pump setup, a yong heng with 2 hrs on it and hopefully soon a second tank. You know you have to have some type of back up when you have a addiction!

Allen
 
  • Like
Reactions: SteveV
My arms hurt just thinking about springers!

arm-day.gif



Allen
 
  • Haha
Reactions: HogKiller
I'm only running my YH about 3 hours per year (a bottle fill per month) and it is working well. I might be patient enough to order parts for it when it breaks but it is likely I will order another YH and a rebuild kit for my current one. I ordered the first from Amazon because of their great return policy. If their price is decent I will likely do the same again. That way if I get a "bad one" that walks across the counter or otherwise misbehaves from the start I will just send it back and hope the next is better. It's cheaper to have several YHs that one "good" compressor. As long as I can get at least 3 years before it needs major work I will probably stick with them. So far I think it's a great buy.
 
I'm only running my YH about 3 hours per year (a bottle fill per month) and it is working well. I might be patient enough to order parts for it when it breaks but it is likely I will order another YH and a rebuild kit for my current one. I ordered the first from Amazon because of their great return policy. If their price is decent I will likely do the same again. That way if I get a "bad one" that walks across the counter or otherwise misbehaves from the start I will just send it back and hope the next is better. It's cheaper to have several YHs that one "good" compressor. As long as I can get at least 3 years before it needs major work I will probably stick with them. So far I think it's a great buy.
I've got 3 Yong Hengs, 2 working and one blew out the crank case. My oldest is 8 yrs old with a couple of piston replacements. I use mine almost every day. I love em, easy to repair, inexpensive parts from China. By a few parts before they break, 2-3 weeks wait time for parts.