An air compressor is a device that converts power (using an electric motor, diesel or gasoline engine, etc.) into potential energy stored in pressurized air (i.e., compressed air).
By one of several methods, an air compressor forces more and more air
into a storage tank, increasing the pressure. When tank pressure reaches
its engineered upper limit the air compressor shuts off. The compressed
air, then, is held in the tank until called into use.[1]
The energy contained in the compressed air can be used for a variety
of applications, utilizing the kinetic energy of the air as it is
released and the tank depressurizes. When tank pressure reaches its
lower limit, the air compressor turns on again and re-pressurizes the
tank.
An air compressor must be differentiated from pump because it works for
any gas/air and pump work on liquid.
Specification | |
Hp/KW | 1 / 0.75 |
Voltage 50 Hz (Volt/Phase) | 220 / 1 |
Air Delivery | 0.08 m³ / min |
Working Pressure (Bar) | 8 |
Cylinder (mm x pcs) | 51 x 2 |
Tank Volume (Ltr) | 70 |
Packing Dimension (cm) | 90 x 40 x 72 |
Weight ( Kg ) | 75 |