First tank

If you were getting your first tank today, what would you get? I am new, have a compressor but would love a good sized tank so I can do a bunch of target shooting and night pest control without the noise of the compressor. Prefer large tanks for more fills. Thank you!
I like the Omega 100 cubic foot. I have the older style valve but the newer HP3 valves are nice. And I would get the Alpha molecule filter from Joe B (that’s all I would buy from him). I'm currently about to pull the trigger on an Omega Air Charger.
 
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Reactions: Impact701
Exactly. If comfortable with spending a grand on a big new CF bottle, it is your money. No one is being injured by exploding CF air bottles, don't make that claim it's hyperbolic at best. Evidence of exploded bottles would be quite welcome. Carbon Fiber, Aramid and Aluminum liners have very long service lives far greater than that somehow magic 15 year period. What is the difference between a 15 year bottle and a thirty year bottle? I'll contend 15 years is the only difference. These bottles are not poorly constructed submersibles stressing CF in compression bass ackwards on that deal. We pays our money, and we takes our chances.
 
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The larger 60 minute SCBA air bottles (9CF) are much harder to find used and cheap versus the 30 min bottles. My plan is to gang two 30 min bottles for a 9 CF supply at home with a QD setup to allow one of the two to be portable. The 30 min bottle is about right to tote along for me. I made a nice bottle cover from the arm section of an old marine survival suit, just perfect to protect the CF bottle from bumps and bruises. The suit had two arms. :)
 
I bought a used Air Venturi tank for $300 (large one). It looked pretty new. I took it to get it visually inspected upon delivery and everything checked out. I haven’t looked back. Keep an eye open for a deal from a reputable vendor. My first tank was a smaller SCBA tank that was under $600 I think. A good deal on a used tank from a reputable dealer is the way to go.
 
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My budget for air bottles is more in the 50-100 dollar range. IE: Well used and expired SCBA air bottles. If they fail they do not fail violently, treat them with care, don't use bottles that have damage in to the wrap. Inspect them and use the heck out of them. If these bottles fail violently we would already have that data, I contend there is none. Much more important to be cautious with QD connections, don't wrap your hand around the bottle neck, depressurize your gun fully PRIOR to disassembly, respect that a blast of 3 K PSI air will pass directly through your hand causing rapid unplanned disassembly of same. Same if an O-ring blows out at a bottle neck extreme hurt is a given if our hand is there. It is not hard to be safe and careful, new bottles can fail too, in the same ways as an old one.
 
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I think I paid 48 bucks for the last 30 min bottle I got off Ebay, they are cheap and available. I care not about manufacture date and DOT certification. I fill my own bottles. The "expired" 60 min. air bottles are much harder to find and much more costly typically more than double the 30's more like triple the cost. I think the thrifty and handy answer for me is to gang two 30's for home air with QD to take one bottle with for the range or field. I'll work on that when the toy fund recovers. Currently selling my big motor coach on ebay..oy vay people sure are flaky, I have sold it twice already this week! I revised the ad to 500 deposit req. within 24 hr. No more flakes...not for free!
 
I am another happy user of an expired Scott 45 minute fireman's tank. There is zero technical basis for the 15 year life. Zero. If you think otherwise please read the lengthy report the Navy had done to argue for a change. They want to do a true non destructive test instead of the hydro which damages tanks. It is a messed up situation with some bodies "engineering judgement" imposed on the industry ignoring the data and better testing methods.