Re: Anyone have experience with Harbor Freight air compressors?
Step 1: Go to HF, buy one. Go home, plug it in and use it for a little while blowing up inflatables.
Step 2: Have your bud come over to fill up some trailer tires. Tires will not hold air, but try for an hour anyway.
Step 3: Let the magic smoke out of the electric motor.
Step 4: Wait forever to get replacement parts.
Step 5: Get parts, install.
Step 6: Plug in.
Step 7: Let magic smoke out again.
Step 8 : Take smoked out motor off, tie it to a line to use as a spare anchor for the canoe.
Step 9: Take the teenie- weenie thin walled pump , paint in an artistic fashion and pawn it off on Craigslist.
Step 10: Go buy some bags of concrete. Drive home.
Step 11 : Mix concrete, install to inside of air tank for a nice leak-proof liner.
Step 12: Darn, it still will not seal. Add more concrete.
Step 13 : Darn, still no seal.
Step 14 : Spend a day figuring out how to seal the leaky tank.
Step 15 : Realizing that the tank has not a chance in hell of being worth a darn for holding air , the motor already had found a better use, and the pump has gone to a sucker on Craigslist, speculate about what to do with a nice concrete lined tank for another day.
Step 16 : Come to the realization that you just wasted your money.
Step 17 : Form a charitable organization.
Step 18: Donate the nice concrete lined steel tank to your neighbor so he can use it as a mooring for his swimming raft.
Step 19 : Drive to a real store.
Step 20 : Buy a nice compressor that you will not have to worry about.
Step 21 : Drive home, wire it up and rivet / grind/ buff/ inflate away to your hearts content.
