My cheapo 15 year old Craftsman 3 gallon air compressor seized up. I've had my grandfathers old Sears compressor sitting in my garage for years and I finally took a look at it and I think I'm going to bring it back from the dead. It is built like a tank with a heavy cast iron twin piston (I think) compressor driven by a large motor via a pulley.
Sears 106.174590. Not much information out there on the model number. I found a close-ish number and the parts diagram had 1976 on it. Sounds about right. Hasn't run in 25 years minimum. Looks like it has a 10-12 gallon capacity and either 5.3cfm or 6.0cfm at 90psi. It doesn't say that anywhere on the compressor but that is what some similar looking models say.
There is one sticker on the tank with general operating instructions and it says to use 10W-40 motor oil! I was surprised at this since generally compressors use non-detergent motor oil to prevent the deposits from remaining in suspension.
My first reaction was to go with 0W-40 since this will be used in a garage in the winter and that will help it get moving when it is 0F out. Then I learned about ISO compressor oils and that brought me down a rabbit hole...
It looks like a synthetic ISO 100 oil has a similar viscosity as a SAE30 oil. But what say BITOG? What would be the best synthetic oil to keep this beast alive and well? Stick with xW-40 motor oil or move to an ISO compressor oil?
It looks identical to this....but the label is a bit different. (Internet Picture)
Sears 106.174590. Not much information out there on the model number. I found a close-ish number and the parts diagram had 1976 on it. Sounds about right. Hasn't run in 25 years minimum. Looks like it has a 10-12 gallon capacity and either 5.3cfm or 6.0cfm at 90psi. It doesn't say that anywhere on the compressor but that is what some similar looking models say.
There is one sticker on the tank with general operating instructions and it says to use 10W-40 motor oil! I was surprised at this since generally compressors use non-detergent motor oil to prevent the deposits from remaining in suspension.
My first reaction was to go with 0W-40 since this will be used in a garage in the winter and that will help it get moving when it is 0F out. Then I learned about ISO compressor oils and that brought me down a rabbit hole...
It looks like a synthetic ISO 100 oil has a similar viscosity as a SAE30 oil. But what say BITOG? What would be the best synthetic oil to keep this beast alive and well? Stick with xW-40 motor oil or move to an ISO compressor oil?
It looks identical to this....but the label is a bit different. (Internet Picture)