I think you guys are a bit over concerned about the cooling temps. and comparing to others is not helpful unless you state the ambient temps you are working with. in the So Cal desert here, both of mine ran at over 65C and one accidentally got up to 120C once when the cooling hose got pinched shut. the summer temps in my shop get over 95F and even with the cooling bucket full of ice, head temps get over 60C in less than 10 minutes......just filling up the water separator cylinder (about 2 minutes), gets the temps over 55C. these temps are really not very hot when you consider that 4 stroke gas engines run 200 to 220F cooling temps.
As far as the burst discs go, I have blown a few. they will not hold over 4,000 psi on my unit.....then I might be torquing them too tight. this is my second Yong Heng; the first was a manual shut off, 220 volt model, which is cheaper to run than the 110 volt ones, because they use less amperage. it ran well for the short time I had it, but I lost it when my home burned down a couple years ago. my second one was also a 220 volt, but I made the mistake of getting the auto shut-off model; it would stall and ran intermitently, making me think it was seizing, but it was fine inside and the problem was a bad relay for the shut-off feature was cutting out. I just removed it and bypassed the auto-shut-off feature. I found out that the the cheap relays were a common problem, from brand new. Anyway, even with just 4 bottle fills on my current compressor, i consider it paid for, considering how far I have to drive and how long I have to wait, to get my tanks filled otherwise. If my Yong Heng blows tomorrow, I'll just buy another; I spend more money on one grocery trip!