Tuxing 300 bar Coltri Clone

Ries

Member
May 27, 2019
190
148
Belgium
Hi folks,

Has anyone exprerience with the Tuxing Coltri Clone compressor? I was looking on the web and saw one.
I searched on the forum but couldnt find any good information about it. The compressor looks like a Coltri Mch6 model.

If anyone has experience with this compressor, or has some information about it you are very welcome to post here!

Link : https://www.amazon.de/-/en/pressure...tuxing&qid=1661787955&sprefix=,aps,125&sr=8-6

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220 volt 50 Hz is a European term,, you will probably need to rewire the plug
Generally true but it comes with some caveats. USA/Canada current is 60 Hz. It is generally safe to operate a 50hz machine at 60 Hz BUT it will run at 20% higher RPM than it was intended to. This will be accompanied by a corresponding current increase. This means that if a 20 amp circuit is OK for 50Hz power you may need a 25/30 amp circuit to safely run at 60Hz. In any case the circuit breaker should protect the wiring in this type of situation. Another factor is that nominal household voltage in North America is 240 volt. 220 volts is standard in 50Hz countries. Gieven the same impedence/resistance of the motor load, this will cause a further 10% increase in current compared to 220 volts.

So 1.2 x 1.1 = 1.32 or a 32% total increase in current over nameplate rating.
Regards.
 
My new coltri mch 6 didn't come from China and it was 2800 dollars coltri is made in Italy I talked to the coltri dealer I dealt with and they said in order to get warranty for it if I bought from the lower priced store which shipped from over seas is I'd have to ship it back overseas for warranty and most of the time they are damaged in shipping and is the reason for the lower price he also stated shipping it back overseas from the US would be like 1000.00 dollars so I stayed away from it when I looked at it it was a 1000.00 off what the US dealer had them for
 
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The manufacture is listed as Xiamen Subang Technology, this is a knock off Coltri. I might consider purchasing if the price was 80% less than a genuine Coltri, so $500 or less before I would even think about getting one. There isn’t any way to tell the quality of parts or workmanship until you have owned one for sometime. It’s not work the risk unless it’s extremely cheap and this one definitely isn’t. Look at a genuine Coltri instead.
 
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