I received a new compressor for Orcair for review and it has quickly become my new favorite of the 7 or 8 I have. This thing is totally autonomous and can even fill up to 2.0L tanks!
Check out my video here:
Check out my video here:
Do you really have to ask?"Where else the same place the rest of them are made."
Well, mine is made in USA, not sure where yours are made?
I always bring you guys honest reviews and I work hard to do it. I even answered all your questions in the video comments. Could be you just got a bad one, it happens with literally every manufactured product. I'd suggest letting Amazon send you a replacement to try out before trashing me and the product. Mine works perfectly. This is definitely my favorite compressor of the ones I have. The other one that has been really good is the ToAuto A3 - I have beat the living hell out of that one and it just keeps on going (even after filling a 1.4L tank with it constantly which is against the manual's recommendations).Well I got mine after seeing this review. What a piece of crap! Wouldn't fill past 1500 psi. Tried everything I could think of - just made lots of noise, kicked on booster fan (loud) and then dropped pressure down low then rose higher, then dropped, etc. I don't know why I bothered except this review sounded good. Live and learn and never trust this guys' reviews. And Amazon took it back with no complaints.
These style compressors are regularly referred to as shoebox compressors. Yes I am aware of the Shoebox brand boosters from many years ago, but the term shoebox has become a commonplace descriptor for these small 12v compressors in today's community since, you know, they are about the size of a shoebox.... My title is absolutely correct, if I was describing the Shoebox brand I would have capitalized the "S"...Title is incorrect, it should say ‘Shoebox sized.’
I say this because the Original Shoebox was an American made booster that would run forever if Shoebox would have continued selling them. Shoebox sells only to NASA now.
That is another cheap disposable Chinese compressor which will probably never be in NASA’s inventory.
Regards,
Roachcreek
I didn't see anywhere claiming this was made in America though?Nothing to do with your review, nice video.
But "Made in America " is a very loose term . ALL a manufacturer has to do is put a part together to say "Made in America " Like Toyota did in the very beginning put the truck BED on the chassy , thats it . Made in America ".
Nah, that makes sense. In my personal experience I think these little compressors provide a great value, and as I said before I do agree that they are disposable. So far, even to my surprise, I have only had one really fail. I rebuilt it but could only ever get 3000psi out of it after that for whatever reason. Not even a total fail if we're being honest. This was after about a year and a half of running it to 4500psi constantly. All my other ones (6-7 of them by my estimate) run great. The ToAuto A3 has the most use with definitely over 50 hours on it and only 2 maintenances. I run it daily. The Orcair Thunder in the review here has also been taking a pounding and runs the smoothest out of any of these plus it's autonomous.My reference to being made in America is to describe the quality of most USA and European made quality items and the “iffy” quality of Chinese goods.
My CATs are the same thing, ‘Made in America’should be ‘Made in the America’s’. Parts are made in Mexico, or at least at the time, and assembled in America, (San Diego). They are oil free, but shop compressors that are oil free seem to last longer than small cheap Chinese hpa compressors. My Booster was hade by the Checz’s by Altaros and it is simply superb in all respects.
Some of these cheap little compressors last quite a while, others do not, these pages are full of such frustrations. But it is what we are stuck with until manufacturing quality improves in Chinese factory’s, or we quit buying them. I had a Spark, I gave it away and it is still running, but Inran a fan on it and watched the heat, which is the enemy of all compressors.
I personally quit buying them, after buying one, and after being spoiled after years of running the true Shoebox.
All compressors will need rebuilding as long as it is not a catastrophic failure.
I went a different route as I wanted to fill large bottles. My CATS, the drive and supply shop compressors, are disposable, but due to their work load being reduced by increased numbers and heat managed by fans and low 30/70 work load. But they are cheap to replace and easy for me to ship. And the system runs well on two, so I went to three. After two and a half years I am still waiting for failure. My set-up cost around 4 or 5 times as much as the disposable cheap china boxes, but I figured at the time I would probably buy that many china devices over the years, as many of you have or will. My system will last longer than I will.
I just take offense by the term Shoebox, IF it is used in a way to increase sales by using that name, not that the Chinese would ever do such a thing, and I don’t think you are. You and the Chinese may call them Shoebox sized, but in use they are of course are not original Shoebox. compressors.
They are just what most of us are stuck with until workmanship and technology catch up.
So yes buy the Amazon warrantee as Airshootists suggests and don’t fool yourself with what your getting.
Sorry if my jibberish is hard to read, my eyes are giving out for the day.
Regards,
Roachcreek
I'm glad I took the time to write all that just for you to just not read it and respond anyway. Lol. Tires are disposable products, too. So are batteries. So are, actually; a ton of things. Everything has a service life. Disposable is not a reason for manufacturers to create garbage. The better reputation a company gets for making quality disposable products the more sales will result. The inverse is also true. Bro, this is like Economics 101 day one stuff....Why would they make them better if they are selling one after another because they are disposable? The manufacturers are making a lot of money without any improvements....right?
...... So with the main driving factor for increased sales in any market being delivery of quality products - it makes sense that they would adopt a system of continuous improvement to their products......