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Date:         Fri, 6 Oct 1995 16:36:15 -0500
Sender:       Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@vanagon.com>
From:         Peter&Varshna <ztgst@eden.com>
Subject:      Air in the Life (longish)

Citizens:

This is an extremely belated thanks to all of those who responded to my questions concerning air compressors a while back. The volume and quality of the responses surprised me even though I'd been reading the list for a while and knew before hand that youz were a friendly and knowledgeable bunch. As suggested by more than one list member, I've been buying air tools for the last several weeks and am only now about to go buy the compressor itself.

What had me hesitating was when Bob Hoover and a couple of others validated my apprehension by responding that perhaps an investment in a compressed air system was too much for "one restoration project." True to my character, I thought about it too much. I thought about it all that first weekend after receiving the list's responses while I was busy changing out the rear bearings on the Honkeymobile ( aka Der Honkenvagen), my shrimpboat of a 4-door mid-seventies American car I use to drive back and forth to work. I thought about it some more the next weekend when I was changing her front bearings. I thought about it even more the following weekend as I was changing out the rear brakes of my wife's SCANFEB (Sub-Compact, American Nameplate/Far-East Built) vehicle. That's when, after cracking my knuckes for the second time while fighting one of the return springs, it finally hit me: buying a bus was never about "one restoration project," it was about embarking on an entire *lifestyle.* Duh!

I decided then and their that getting a compressed air system would do nothing but increase the Quality of my lifestyle; that's big-Q Persigian "Zen and the Art" type Quality.

Concerning whether to air or not to air, I received many personal responses from list memebers who had compressed air saying that they were very pleased with it, if for nothing else then blowing crud out of nooks and crannies. I didn't receive a single response from anyone who had air expressing any regrets whatsoever.

I'm getting the Compresssor from Sam's Club, a six HP 60-gallon jobbie. I have looked and looked and looked again at what was available and Sears had a tempting 6.5 HP 33-gallon portable but it was a direct drive "oiless" jobbie and someone had commented in one of the responses I'd received how he'd brought back the one he'd purchased because it was so LOUD. Oiless? Loud? Something wrong with that picture...

Chris Chubb:

Last weekend at Home Depot they were running a special on a 6 HP 30-gallon 2-cylinder belt-drive portable for only $327! The only problem with the less powerful ones is that the tank is smaller. Several members suggested bigger tanks are always better because they don't require the engine to run as much.

Anyway, thanks again everybody!

peter.


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