I,m thinking about getting a portable air compressor?

Well as long as I have been into this hobby never had a portable air compressor. I know this has been ask many times, but I
just need to ask . I have a hard time understanding how these units can keep from over heating, not being water cooled.
You that have them how long can I expect it to last? How many times have you used yours with out problems? I just must
get some info with out throwing good money on something that going to be giving problems. Thank you for your honest
opinions!
🪰Fly
 
Glad you asked. If you are serious about purchasing a portable compressor my suggestion is to look at the GX brand. You will be able to find then being sold at Amazon, Ebay, AliExpress and even Walmart. I have a GX CS1 & GX CS1-I compressors that have served me over three years without being rebuild. The maintenance I have done is to clean out the bottom check valve regularly and then one time I opened each of my units up for cleaning and a relube job. There are videos and reviews of these compressors on YouTube with more than you might care to watch.

There are a couple of times each of my units will run 'hot' and need to be shut down with fans running for 10 minutes as a cooling cycle. I shoot twice a day and fill the rifle fired after each session. The units only run hot when the local temperatures rise and I am filling from empty due to tuning/ retuning my varioius guns.


Good luck with your search.
 
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I got a GX CS2 earlier this year. I've filled my guns a couple dozen times with it. I filled my Avenger once from completely empty. But usually I am filling my P35s from 150 bar to 250 bar. Takes about 5 minutes if I'm using the GX filter. 3 minutes without. If has never gotten hot including the Avenger fill from zero. If you just use it for gun fills I don't think it would get hot. I think they recommend only using it for 30 minutes at a time. I have not gotten close.

The GX compressors cycle the piston much slower than my Yong Heng. They are also smaller. Both things help them stay cool. I think they are better engineered too. They are lubricated with grease and have ball and roller bearings. The Yong Heng is splash lubricated.

I also wanted portability so I got the CS2. It is the smallest and lightest. I got the normal one and then added a power tool battery setup for it myself. Materials were about $25. There is a thread. Now I can power it with my Milwaukee tool batteries, or a vehicle, or 120V if I am home. It's no frills with no auto shutoff and no switch on the cooling fans, they start when you connect power, but I like that. Does the job without the extras. But if you want more features there are other models. The CS3 is the same basic compressor with a bigger case covering things and auto shutoff. The CS4 is still portable but has water cooling and is a little bigger. It is supposed to be able to fill mid size bottles. I think it weighs about 40 lbs where my CS2 weighs 15.
 
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Gx cs2 that is over 1.5 years old and going great. Parts are available and they are super easy to work on. I recently replaced the low pressure piston ring on mine even though it really didn’t seem to need it. I’ve run it many times through a larger sized tuxing filter for 15 min fills on a 500cc 300 bar tank. Takes it in stride.

The only other thing I’ve had to do was replace the fill hose. It ended up getting a small hole in it.
 
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