Reminds me of something I picked up years back, and haven't seen another
of - a rechargeable compressed air sprayer. Works more or less like the
disposable "canned air" sprayers you get by the half dozen at Fry's or
Microcenter, complete with the plastic straw to direct the air. But this
one had a bicycle pump valve on the bottom so you could refill it as
needed.

Isn't that what Fred pointed to?

Almost, and that part overlaps.
I pointed to a refillable liquid sprayer. (we were talking about
spraying paint)
He's asking about a refillable air duster. (as opposed to the disposable
"Dust-Off" from Fry's, etc.)

On Sun, 24 Mar 2019, Chuck Guzis via cctalk wrote:
So this?

https://www.amazon.com/EWK-Aluminum-Pneumatic-Refillable-Compressed/dp/B00JKED4MS

Just be sure to use a dryer on your compressor output.  Compressed air
can hold a lot of moisture.

Close, but that also is still intended for spraying liquids. The first Q&A asks, and people comment that for air, it won't hold enough ("5 seconds") It is a tiny size, with low pressure.

A scuba "buddy bottle"/"pony bottle" can be pressurized to 3000 psi, instead of just 90 - 150 psi. Therefore, it needs a primary stage regulator, to get it down well below 150, and, as Chuck mentioned, a dryer if you don't want to spray a lot of water.

Pneumatic tools are typically run at 80 to 120 psi.
90 is the nominal standard, although many shops run at 125, or even 150, for higher torque, at the expense of reduced tool life and safety. Your nozzle, for OSHA compliance, must be vented, so that when "dead-ended" blocking primary outlet, the pressure at the blocked end will be no more than 30psi. A compliant vented nozzle will put out far more output pressure (when NOT dead-ended) on 90 psi, than a non-vented nozzle at only 30 psi.

For blowing dust, you do not want or need more than about 20 psi. A hose from a spare tire can do.


--
Grumpy Ol' Fred                 ci...@xenosoft.com

Reply via email to