Any suggestions for a compressor that would be best with minimal use? Something that doesn't need to be run often but will still be reliable.
There's nothing wrong with a Yong Heng, especially with "minimal use". My use of them has been more than minimal. With a track record of 3.5 years of solid service, a price of $300 or less, plus getting a FULL REFUND when it stopped working due to extended warranty, how can one go wrong?
I agree with the Yong Heng.I bought a Yong Heng 4 years ago and used it a lot including filling of large tanks. Although I didn't run it longer than 15 minutes, the second stage piston failed. Not due to heat or bad seals, but the brass ring separating the 3 O rings had broken. I replaced the piston and I've been using it now for 3 years primarily to fill rifles not tanks. Usually runs around 3-4 minutes to do that and I use it 5-6 times per month. I'd say that's pretty good. Parts are dirt cheap and it's easy to overhaul if you need to. Based on your statement that you will only use it infrequently, I recommend a YH. You can get them on Amazon for less than $300. Don't buy any extended warranty.
I think that you do not understand this issue. It is not limited use as you stated. It all about duty cycle. In order for any gas to be compressed, it must release heat. That heat must be removed and there is the difference between the cheap compressors and the expensive ones The expensive ones have extensive cooling between the stages and the cheap ones do not. There is no free lunch. This is reflected in resale value. Do your own research.Any suggestions for a compressor that would be best with minimal use? Something that doesn't need to be run often but will still be reliable.
There is no such thing as light use. It is fiction. When it is running, it is compressing. Your English is just wrong. Use correct English, it is NOT light use. It is duty cycle, very big difference. Your poor use of the language confuses the audience. If you don't understand the difference, Google is your friendmany things last 'alot' longer if theyre used for light duty, attention to detail, and stored well, dry environment etc .. pound something with nonstop use, thats where reason comes into play when youre making a purchase, buy something heavy duty and expect itl still have limited existence lol ... buy something light duty and generic to pound the living daylights out of, theres really no explaining to that guy lol, you can try i guess .
I read so much misinformation on this forum, it upsets me. The cheap Yong Heng compressors can work in some circumstances, like charging a gun a few times a month, but that is it. I shoot every day at least 1 magazine. That adds up to more than 10,000 pellets a year. You are not going to do that with the cheap compressors. My 4 cyl. Bauer was made in 1968. It still runs fine. I have never had to fix anything and that compressor is worth today 3 times what it cost new in its current state. That is economical, not a $300 Yong Heng special that fails often in short order. No sane person would buy a used $300 compressor. There is a huge difference in time and effort between charging a gun with a compressor and charging the same gun with a large bottle. My CF bottle/charging station cost almost $1,000. I have 3 of them. That's what this hobby cost.
Calculating your real requirement is not rocket science. Do that first, that will determine the equipment you need.
Youre the one spreading misinformation. I have a hill at the house, but I use a $200 spritech amazon 12dc 110/220 ac 300bar comp to fill on the range or hunt. I have used it every day multiple fills of a 290cc/230bar, 500cc 300bar, and 67cc 250bar bottle every day for a long time with minimal maintenance. I don't know what kind of things you're talking about. "Light use" means not running it hot for extended times trying to fill 2l+ 300bar tanks with a single or twin piston. A 180-300$ comp well maintained with a decent air dryer/filter will do plenty. You must live in the most humid, salty environment known to man.I read so much misinformation on this forum, it upsets me. The cheap Yong Heng compressors can work in some circumstances, like charging a gun a few times a month, but that is it. I shoot every day at least 1 magazine. That adds up to more than 10,000 pellets a year. You are not going to do that with the cheap compressors. My 4 cyl. Bauer was made in 1968. It still runs fine. I have never had to fix anything and that compressor is worth today 3 times what it cost new in its current state. That is economical, not a $300 Yong Heng special that fails often in short order. No sane person would buy a used $300 compressor. There is a huge difference in time and effort between charging a gun with a compressor and charging the same gun with a large bottle. My CF bottle/charging station cost almost $1,000. I have 3 of them. That's what this hobby cost.
Calculating your real requirement is not rocket science. Do that first, that will determine the equipment you need.
100% im filling a dreamline, crown, and notos with the spritech in field. I watch the temp and only run the guns from 250-155 hunting and to 200 at the range. My "unusable pos" mobile single cylinder spritech never runs above 40⁰c or ill shut it off. I run in the chilled ac'd car before i fill as to keep the compressor safe. If it's hot outside I just stop the fill 10-15 bar short to allow the expansion of 65⁰f air to 95⁰f air without exceeding recommended fill pressure. Typically on a 150-250 fill the comp barely reaches 37.5⁰c.Also, the usable bottle volume is around 10% of its total volume. The need to charge the bottle occurs when the bottle pressure drops below the required charged gun pressure. In my case I get about 10 magazines of 17 rounds with my GK1 and I get 5 charges of my FX crown, each charge equates to 70 rounds. Do your own numbers. If you buy a compressor and bottle that does not meet your requirement, you have waisted your money.