Air tank to refill tires
#101
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Air tank to refill tires
What price range and product name are you talking about, I haven't
made a cheap one last through on tire.
God Bless America, ßill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Bob Casanova wrote:
>
> Anyone seen a 12V compressor that actually was designed for
> tires; maybe 50-60psi instead of the 200psi or so these
> things generally advertise, with corresponding increase in
> volume-per-unit-time? I can't think of any tires used on
> roads (or off, for that matter) that need anywhere close to
> what these little monsters supply. Maybe at an airbase...
>
> Bob C.
>
> Reply to Bob-Casanova @ worldnet.att.net
> (without the spaces, of course)
>
> "The most exciting phrase to hear in science,
> the one that heralds new discoveries, is not
> 'Eureka!' but 'That's funny...'"
> - Isaac Asimov
made a cheap one last through on tire.
God Bless America, ßill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Bob Casanova wrote:
>
> Anyone seen a 12V compressor that actually was designed for
> tires; maybe 50-60psi instead of the 200psi or so these
> things generally advertise, with corresponding increase in
> volume-per-unit-time? I can't think of any tires used on
> roads (or off, for that matter) that need anywhere close to
> what these little monsters supply. Maybe at an airbase...
>
> Bob C.
>
> Reply to Bob-Casanova @ worldnet.att.net
> (without the spaces, of course)
>
> "The most exciting phrase to hear in science,
> the one that heralds new discoveries, is not
> 'Eureka!' but 'That's funny...'"
> - Isaac Asimov
#102
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Air tank to refill tires
In news:407D9045.EE0931F4@***.net,
L.W. (ßill) ------ III <----------@***.net> thought:
| I don't think they are that slow. Remember the slower you
| can make your engine run the faster it pumps. About the same
| amount of time to air up as down.
| God Bless America, ßill O|||||||O
| mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
|
| Mike Romain wrote:
||
|| The unburned fuel just goes out the exhaust. The compression
|| just works a piston that sucks fresh air from the sides of
|| the thing and puts it out the middle under compression.
||
|| They do work really well, but are really slow.
||
|| Mike
Slow = Fast? WTF?! I think I need a Jack on the rocks...
--
--
Joe Pribe
NC
jpribe 'at' nc.rr.com <you know the drill
jegp 'at' hotmail.com < at is really @
---- I Love My O|||||||O TJ
L.W. (ßill) ------ III <----------@***.net> thought:
| I don't think they are that slow. Remember the slower you
| can make your engine run the faster it pumps. About the same
| amount of time to air up as down.
| God Bless America, ßill O|||||||O
| mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
|
| Mike Romain wrote:
||
|| The unburned fuel just goes out the exhaust. The compression
|| just works a piston that sucks fresh air from the sides of
|| the thing and puts it out the middle under compression.
||
|| They do work really well, but are really slow.
||
|| Mike
Slow = Fast? WTF?! I think I need a Jack on the rocks...
--
--
Joe Pribe
NC
jpribe 'at' nc.rr.com <you know the drill
jegp 'at' hotmail.com < at is really @
---- I Love My O|||||||O TJ
#103
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Air tank to refill tires
In news:407D9045.EE0931F4@***.net,
L.W. (ßill) ------ III <----------@***.net> thought:
| I don't think they are that slow. Remember the slower you
| can make your engine run the faster it pumps. About the same
| amount of time to air up as down.
| God Bless America, ßill O|||||||O
| mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
|
| Mike Romain wrote:
||
|| The unburned fuel just goes out the exhaust. The compression
|| just works a piston that sucks fresh air from the sides of
|| the thing and puts it out the middle under compression.
||
|| They do work really well, but are really slow.
||
|| Mike
Slow = Fast? WTF?! I think I need a Jack on the rocks...
--
--
Joe Pribe
NC
jpribe 'at' nc.rr.com <you know the drill
jegp 'at' hotmail.com < at is really @
---- I Love My O|||||||O TJ
L.W. (ßill) ------ III <----------@***.net> thought:
| I don't think they are that slow. Remember the slower you
| can make your engine run the faster it pumps. About the same
| amount of time to air up as down.
| God Bless America, ßill O|||||||O
| mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
|
| Mike Romain wrote:
||
|| The unburned fuel just goes out the exhaust. The compression
|| just works a piston that sucks fresh air from the sides of
|| the thing and puts it out the middle under compression.
||
|| They do work really well, but are really slow.
||
|| Mike
Slow = Fast? WTF?! I think I need a Jack on the rocks...
--
--
Joe Pribe
NC
jpribe 'at' nc.rr.com <you know the drill
jegp 'at' hotmail.com < at is really @
---- I Love My O|||||||O TJ
#104
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Air tank to refill tires
In news:407D9045.EE0931F4@***.net,
L.W. (ßill) ------ III <----------@***.net> thought:
| I don't think they are that slow. Remember the slower you
| can make your engine run the faster it pumps. About the same
| amount of time to air up as down.
| God Bless America, ßill O|||||||O
| mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
|
| Mike Romain wrote:
||
|| The unburned fuel just goes out the exhaust. The compression
|| just works a piston that sucks fresh air from the sides of
|| the thing and puts it out the middle under compression.
||
|| They do work really well, but are really slow.
||
|| Mike
Slow = Fast? WTF?! I think I need a Jack on the rocks...
--
--
Joe Pribe
NC
jpribe 'at' nc.rr.com <you know the drill
jegp 'at' hotmail.com < at is really @
---- I Love My O|||||||O TJ
L.W. (ßill) ------ III <----------@***.net> thought:
| I don't think they are that slow. Remember the slower you
| can make your engine run the faster it pumps. About the same
| amount of time to air up as down.
| God Bless America, ßill O|||||||O
| mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
|
| Mike Romain wrote:
||
|| The unburned fuel just goes out the exhaust. The compression
|| just works a piston that sucks fresh air from the sides of
|| the thing and puts it out the middle under compression.
||
|| They do work really well, but are really slow.
||
|| Mike
Slow = Fast? WTF?! I think I need a Jack on the rocks...
--
--
Joe Pribe
NC
jpribe 'at' nc.rr.com <you know the drill
jegp 'at' hotmail.com < at is really @
---- I Love My O|||||||O TJ
#105
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Air tank to refill tires
In news:407D9045.EE0931F4@***.net,
L.W. (ßill) ------ III <----------@***.net> thought:
| I don't think they are that slow. Remember the slower you
| can make your engine run the faster it pumps. About the same
| amount of time to air up as down.
| God Bless America, ßill O|||||||O
| mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
|
| Mike Romain wrote:
||
|| The unburned fuel just goes out the exhaust. The compression
|| just works a piston that sucks fresh air from the sides of
|| the thing and puts it out the middle under compression.
||
|| They do work really well, but are really slow.
||
|| Mike
Slow = Fast? WTF?! I think I need a Jack on the rocks...
--
--
Joe Pribe
NC
jpribe 'at' nc.rr.com <you know the drill
jegp 'at' hotmail.com < at is really @
---- I Love My O|||||||O TJ
L.W. (ßill) ------ III <----------@***.net> thought:
| I don't think they are that slow. Remember the slower you
| can make your engine run the faster it pumps. About the same
| amount of time to air up as down.
| God Bless America, ßill O|||||||O
| mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
|
| Mike Romain wrote:
||
|| The unburned fuel just goes out the exhaust. The compression
|| just works a piston that sucks fresh air from the sides of
|| the thing and puts it out the middle under compression.
||
|| They do work really well, but are really slow.
||
|| Mike
Slow = Fast? WTF?! I think I need a Jack on the rocks...
--
--
Joe Pribe
NC
jpribe 'at' nc.rr.com <you know the drill
jegp 'at' hotmail.com < at is really @
---- I Love My O|||||||O TJ
#106
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Air tank to refill tires
Sean Prinz <s_prinz@msn.com> wrote:
> There is no path between the outside air and the inside of the engine. It
> uses the compression of the engine to push a piston up and down in the
> cylinder. I used to carry one when going cross country racing on my IT400
> dirt bike. I would pull out my compression release and install it to air up
> after fixing flats. The last place I knew to get one was at your local farm
> supply.
That sounds different from the one Bill and I am familar with. Bill posted
a link to a picture of his a few messages back. I don't own one of these,
but saw someone use one a few years ago. The one I saw was just like the one
Bill posted.
Bill's sucks the ambient air from the engine compartment via the little
"slots" you see on the left side of this picture:
http://www.----------.com/pumper.jpg
Presumably, there's a check valve that opens and closes allowing the outside
air into the cylinder while the piston moves downward. At the bottom of the
piston's stroke, the valve closes off the "slots" allowing the piston to "push"
the air into the hose on the upward compression stroke -- thus filling your
tires.
If you didn't get the air from the outside, you'd be getting it from the
intake manifold. Of course, your tires would also get a charge of the fuel
mixture along with the air...
-John
> There is no path between the outside air and the inside of the engine. It
> uses the compression of the engine to push a piston up and down in the
> cylinder. I used to carry one when going cross country racing on my IT400
> dirt bike. I would pull out my compression release and install it to air up
> after fixing flats. The last place I knew to get one was at your local farm
> supply.
That sounds different from the one Bill and I am familar with. Bill posted
a link to a picture of his a few messages back. I don't own one of these,
but saw someone use one a few years ago. The one I saw was just like the one
Bill posted.
Bill's sucks the ambient air from the engine compartment via the little
"slots" you see on the left side of this picture:
http://www.----------.com/pumper.jpg
Presumably, there's a check valve that opens and closes allowing the outside
air into the cylinder while the piston moves downward. At the bottom of the
piston's stroke, the valve closes off the "slots" allowing the piston to "push"
the air into the hose on the upward compression stroke -- thus filling your
tires.
If you didn't get the air from the outside, you'd be getting it from the
intake manifold. Of course, your tires would also get a charge of the fuel
mixture along with the air...
-John
#107
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Air tank to refill tires
Sean Prinz <s_prinz@msn.com> wrote:
> There is no path between the outside air and the inside of the engine. It
> uses the compression of the engine to push a piston up and down in the
> cylinder. I used to carry one when going cross country racing on my IT400
> dirt bike. I would pull out my compression release and install it to air up
> after fixing flats. The last place I knew to get one was at your local farm
> supply.
That sounds different from the one Bill and I am familar with. Bill posted
a link to a picture of his a few messages back. I don't own one of these,
but saw someone use one a few years ago. The one I saw was just like the one
Bill posted.
Bill's sucks the ambient air from the engine compartment via the little
"slots" you see on the left side of this picture:
http://www.----------.com/pumper.jpg
Presumably, there's a check valve that opens and closes allowing the outside
air into the cylinder while the piston moves downward. At the bottom of the
piston's stroke, the valve closes off the "slots" allowing the piston to "push"
the air into the hose on the upward compression stroke -- thus filling your
tires.
If you didn't get the air from the outside, you'd be getting it from the
intake manifold. Of course, your tires would also get a charge of the fuel
mixture along with the air...
-John
> There is no path between the outside air and the inside of the engine. It
> uses the compression of the engine to push a piston up and down in the
> cylinder. I used to carry one when going cross country racing on my IT400
> dirt bike. I would pull out my compression release and install it to air up
> after fixing flats. The last place I knew to get one was at your local farm
> supply.
That sounds different from the one Bill and I am familar with. Bill posted
a link to a picture of his a few messages back. I don't own one of these,
but saw someone use one a few years ago. The one I saw was just like the one
Bill posted.
Bill's sucks the ambient air from the engine compartment via the little
"slots" you see on the left side of this picture:
http://www.----------.com/pumper.jpg
Presumably, there's a check valve that opens and closes allowing the outside
air into the cylinder while the piston moves downward. At the bottom of the
piston's stroke, the valve closes off the "slots" allowing the piston to "push"
the air into the hose on the upward compression stroke -- thus filling your
tires.
If you didn't get the air from the outside, you'd be getting it from the
intake manifold. Of course, your tires would also get a charge of the fuel
mixture along with the air...
-John
#108
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Air tank to refill tires
Sean Prinz <s_prinz@msn.com> wrote:
> There is no path between the outside air and the inside of the engine. It
> uses the compression of the engine to push a piston up and down in the
> cylinder. I used to carry one when going cross country racing on my IT400
> dirt bike. I would pull out my compression release and install it to air up
> after fixing flats. The last place I knew to get one was at your local farm
> supply.
That sounds different from the one Bill and I am familar with. Bill posted
a link to a picture of his a few messages back. I don't own one of these,
but saw someone use one a few years ago. The one I saw was just like the one
Bill posted.
Bill's sucks the ambient air from the engine compartment via the little
"slots" you see on the left side of this picture:
http://www.----------.com/pumper.jpg
Presumably, there's a check valve that opens and closes allowing the outside
air into the cylinder while the piston moves downward. At the bottom of the
piston's stroke, the valve closes off the "slots" allowing the piston to "push"
the air into the hose on the upward compression stroke -- thus filling your
tires.
If you didn't get the air from the outside, you'd be getting it from the
intake manifold. Of course, your tires would also get a charge of the fuel
mixture along with the air...
-John
> There is no path between the outside air and the inside of the engine. It
> uses the compression of the engine to push a piston up and down in the
> cylinder. I used to carry one when going cross country racing on my IT400
> dirt bike. I would pull out my compression release and install it to air up
> after fixing flats. The last place I knew to get one was at your local farm
> supply.
That sounds different from the one Bill and I am familar with. Bill posted
a link to a picture of his a few messages back. I don't own one of these,
but saw someone use one a few years ago. The one I saw was just like the one
Bill posted.
Bill's sucks the ambient air from the engine compartment via the little
"slots" you see on the left side of this picture:
http://www.----------.com/pumper.jpg
Presumably, there's a check valve that opens and closes allowing the outside
air into the cylinder while the piston moves downward. At the bottom of the
piston's stroke, the valve closes off the "slots" allowing the piston to "push"
the air into the hose on the upward compression stroke -- thus filling your
tires.
If you didn't get the air from the outside, you'd be getting it from the
intake manifold. Of course, your tires would also get a charge of the fuel
mixture along with the air...
-John
#109
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Air tank to refill tires
Sean Prinz <s_prinz@msn.com> wrote:
> There is no path between the outside air and the inside of the engine. It
> uses the compression of the engine to push a piston up and down in the
> cylinder. I used to carry one when going cross country racing on my IT400
> dirt bike. I would pull out my compression release and install it to air up
> after fixing flats. The last place I knew to get one was at your local farm
> supply.
That sounds different from the one Bill and I am familar with. Bill posted
a link to a picture of his a few messages back. I don't own one of these,
but saw someone use one a few years ago. The one I saw was just like the one
Bill posted.
Bill's sucks the ambient air from the engine compartment via the little
"slots" you see on the left side of this picture:
http://www.----------.com/pumper.jpg
Presumably, there's a check valve that opens and closes allowing the outside
air into the cylinder while the piston moves downward. At the bottom of the
piston's stroke, the valve closes off the "slots" allowing the piston to "push"
the air into the hose on the upward compression stroke -- thus filling your
tires.
If you didn't get the air from the outside, you'd be getting it from the
intake manifold. Of course, your tires would also get a charge of the fuel
mixture along with the air...
-John
> There is no path between the outside air and the inside of the engine. It
> uses the compression of the engine to push a piston up and down in the
> cylinder. I used to carry one when going cross country racing on my IT400
> dirt bike. I would pull out my compression release and install it to air up
> after fixing flats. The last place I knew to get one was at your local farm
> supply.
That sounds different from the one Bill and I am familar with. Bill posted
a link to a picture of his a few messages back. I don't own one of these,
but saw someone use one a few years ago. The one I saw was just like the one
Bill posted.
Bill's sucks the ambient air from the engine compartment via the little
"slots" you see on the left side of this picture:
http://www.----------.com/pumper.jpg
Presumably, there's a check valve that opens and closes allowing the outside
air into the cylinder while the piston moves downward. At the bottom of the
piston's stroke, the valve closes off the "slots" allowing the piston to "push"
the air into the hose on the upward compression stroke -- thus filling your
tires.
If you didn't get the air from the outside, you'd be getting it from the
intake manifold. Of course, your tires would also get a charge of the fuel
mixture along with the air...
-John
#110
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Air tank to refill tires
You guys are talking the same thing...
Mike
John Sevey wrote:
>
> Sean Prinz <s_prinz@msn.com> wrote:
> > There is no path between the outside air and the inside of the engine. It
> > uses the compression of the engine to push a piston up and down in the
> > cylinder. I used to carry one when going cross country racing on my IT400
> > dirt bike. I would pull out my compression release and install it to air up
> > after fixing flats. The last place I knew to get one was at your local farm
> > supply.
>
> That sounds different from the one Bill and I am familar with. Bill posted
> a link to a picture of his a few messages back. I don't own one of these,
> but saw someone use one a few years ago. The one I saw was just like the one
> Bill posted.
>
> Bill's sucks the ambient air from the engine compartment via the little
> "slots" you see on the left side of this picture:
>
> http://www.----------.com/pumper.jpg
>
> Presumably, there's a check valve that opens and closes allowing the outside
> air into the cylinder while the piston moves downward. At the bottom of the
> piston's stroke, the valve closes off the "slots" allowing the piston to "push"
> the air into the hose on the upward compression stroke -- thus filling your
> tires.
>
> If you didn't get the air from the outside, you'd be getting it from the
> intake manifold. Of course, your tires would also get a charge of the fuel
> mixture along with the air...
>
> -John
Mike
John Sevey wrote:
>
> Sean Prinz <s_prinz@msn.com> wrote:
> > There is no path between the outside air and the inside of the engine. It
> > uses the compression of the engine to push a piston up and down in the
> > cylinder. I used to carry one when going cross country racing on my IT400
> > dirt bike. I would pull out my compression release and install it to air up
> > after fixing flats. The last place I knew to get one was at your local farm
> > supply.
>
> That sounds different from the one Bill and I am familar with. Bill posted
> a link to a picture of his a few messages back. I don't own one of these,
> but saw someone use one a few years ago. The one I saw was just like the one
> Bill posted.
>
> Bill's sucks the ambient air from the engine compartment via the little
> "slots" you see on the left side of this picture:
>
> http://www.----------.com/pumper.jpg
>
> Presumably, there's a check valve that opens and closes allowing the outside
> air into the cylinder while the piston moves downward. At the bottom of the
> piston's stroke, the valve closes off the "slots" allowing the piston to "push"
> the air into the hose on the upward compression stroke -- thus filling your
> tires.
>
> If you didn't get the air from the outside, you'd be getting it from the
> intake manifold. Of course, your tires would also get a charge of the fuel
> mixture along with the air...
>
> -John