some airgunners bought several cheap compressors.
for example:
3 cheap units for each 200$ = 600$ + filters / parts + 200$ = 800 $
800$ down the toilet
its just an example but if they had bought a bauer for 3500$ (filters included)
ill bet you can resell the used bauer for at least 2500$
and they had a LOT MORE LESS pain in the ass and time wasting with the cheap ones
Thanks for the input. I can’t afford a Bauer so ill just have to settle for a Coltri.
some airgunners bought several cheap compressors.
for example:
3 cheap units for each 200$ = 600$ + filters / parts + 200$ = 800 $
800$ down the toilet
its just an example but if they had bought a bauer for 3500$ (filters included)
ill bet you can resell the used bauer for at least 2500$
and they had a LOT MORE LESS pain in the ass and time wasting with the cheap ones
There is no substitute for a Bauer. They just run for years and years without any issues. If you are serious about this sport, make the investment to acquire one and never look back. You can find them used if you look long enough. They never lose their value because they don't break and the parts to repair them are readily available.
There is no substitute for a Bauer. They just run for years and years without any issues. If you are serious about this sport, make the investment to acquire one and never look back. You can find them used if you look long enough. They never lose their value because they don't break and the parts to repair them are readily available.
I can certainly agree but finding a quality middle ground is also possible I believe. The $2k is borderline insane yet alone another $1500 on top of that.
There is no substitute for a Bauer. They just run for years and years without any issues. If you are serious about this sport, make the investment to acquire one and never look back. You can find them used if you look long enough. They never lose their value because they don't break and the parts to repair them are readily available.
I can certainly agree but finding a quality middle ground is also possible I believe. The $2k is borderline insane yet alone another $1500 on top of that.
Agree. Bauer's are probably great but they may not be what everyone can afford or would consider sensible.
There is no substitute for a Bauer. They just run for years and years without any issues. If you are serious about this sport, make the investment to acquire one and never look back. You can find them used if you look long enough. They never lose their value because they don't break and the parts to repair them are readily available.
I can certainly agree but finding a quality middle ground is also possible I believe. The $2k is borderline insane yet alone another $1500 on top of that.
Agree. Bauer's are probably great but they may not be what everyone can afford or would consider sensible.
The point of my comment I thought was very clear, if not I apologize. I was not commenting on just the quality of the Bauer compressors, I was speaking also about the economics. These lesser ,inexpensive compressors have over a very short time, no resale value. So all money spent on that solution is gone. I even suggest wasted. In comparison, you buy a Bauer, use it for many years and resell it for the same or even more money than you paid for it in the first place. Nothing is cheaper than that. So. in that light, there is no middle ground. A cheap compressor at best is a temporary band-aid, while you save your money and keep your eyes open looking for a Bauer.
As with most things, it's all relative for each person. Some will believe the Bauer is the only way to go and that you could recoup all (or most) of your initial outlay if selling. Quite possible but not certain. Others will believe something as inexpensive as the Yong Heng will serve them well enough for a minor fraction of the Bauer cost. Each person has different relative values and needs. Initial cost outlay for something like a Bauer is quite large but it certainly should last a long time. How much you could recoup on selling is not certain but it should be a substantial amount. Initial cost outlay for the YH is quite small in relation and it almost certainly will not last as long and may have no resale value if sold. All relative.
For my situation the Bauer would have been a major waste of funds, at least to this point in time, since my "cheap" Yong Heng is still happily filling my tank after more than a year. If the YH had failed after a few uses then that would produce a different view on the matter. But it hasn't. So all relative. There is nothing wrong with either approach, or any one of the many other options between the two extremes. No single opinion is correct, only informative.
The problem is no one person here shoots enough and has enough money to have thoroughly wrung out a representative sample size of every major compressor option. As a result, opinions vary dramatically. There is one resource though which is absolutely fantastic:
https://www.airgunnation.com/topic/compressor-survey-results/
This aggregates the data so you have at least an educated guess on what to buy. My takeaway was that, for less than "big money" your best options are the Altaros Booster and the Shoebox Compressor. The latter is..... a bit challenging to purchase. It is basically a one man band selling a compressor based on pretty simple parts which is easy to rebuild, and needs that done somewhat regularly. The Altaros booster is based of another pressure booster, and seems to require rebuilds less frequently than the Shoebox, probably because it runs a LOT cooler, however it requires a much much more powerful air compressor as its pre-booster/power source. Ultimately the Altaros is what I went with.
No option is perfect, but one of the aforementioned two would certainly be my pick. (having chewed through a Rong Heng and a Nomad in less than a year) I currently run an Altaros which I update my review on sporadically to say it is still working and almost maintenance free. No need for a rebuild yet.....
As an aside, I considered a Daystate/Coltri, Omega, as well as a number of other big money compressor options made for big tanks. I ultimately chose not to go with them because no compressor is rebuild-free, they'll all need it eventually, and I quite frankly don't want to have to rebuild one of those things. They're also too heavy to reasonably ship somewhere to have someone else rebuild. So I wanted to go with simple and easy to work on, knowing that I'd be rebuilding it eventually.
I hope that helps.![]()