- Joined
- May 26, 2014
- Messages
- 4,806
- Country Flag
We have a vary large, very old compressor. Anyone know a simple way of working out its CFM?
Maths ain't my strong point Clive..I imagine you’d have to know it’s displacement, then rpm, and the rest is a bit of maths... no?![]()
If I get any likelihood of brass fires, I might take you up on that.Yes. It's a tecalemit.
I'll get a close up of that plate this morning.
Cheers. Would you like a brass fire extinguisher?![]()
They Polish up really nice frank, they almost look gold.Got any gold ones ?lol.
Thanks flint. Some of the info on that thread may explain why I had to replace the con rod in the first place.Not sure, but on this page it mentions the IR T30 being used on the Tecalemits of that era. A search on the IR link mentioned might help.
https://www.mig-welding.co.uk/forum/threads/tecalemit-compressor.23436/
Better still, work out the volume of the receiver and time how long it takes to fill it. If you then average it from 0 to 100psi, (or would that be 14 to 100 psi?), the result you’ll get will be the CFM at 50 psi. In other words it will probably pump more at atmosphere than it does at 100 psi, and decrease over a linear scale. If that makes sense.
Exactly what I was getting at in my last post. In free air they will pump slightly more than at, say, 100 psi. Hence timing the pumping from zero to 100 psi would give the CFM at exactly half the difference. Ie at 50 psi.Richard I was wondering how they spec the compressors in CFM as the compressors will be less efficient the higher the pressure pumped in to.
Probably 10.5 at atmosphere and 10.2 at 100 psi or whatever it’s rated pressure is.Ah, I'm with you now.
Rang them. 10.2 cfm.
Take a bow rich.![]()
Yes. He was more than willing to help.Probably 10.5 at atmosphere and 10.2 at 100 psi or whatever it’s rated pressure is.
Great to have another helpful UK company happy to help on something nearly 50 years old.