RockMonkey
Suddenly Enthusiastic
I have a CO2 tank and regulator. It's a 5 pound bottle, I think. It works great for filling tires and running air tools, but once it's out of gas, I have no backup. I have an ARB 12-Volt compressor, but no tank to hook it to. I want to use the ARB compressor as a backup for when I run out of CO2. I don't think the ARB compressor is reliable enough to use as the primary air source, but it could be great as a backup. My thought is to connect the ARB compressor to the CO2 tank and use it as the reservoir for the compressor after the C02 is exhausted.
My CO2 regulator has 4 ports. 2 high pressure, and 2 regulated (low pressure). If I connect the ARB compressor to one of the low pressure ports, will it fill the tank through the regulator? Will the regulator allow air flow in the reverse direction, if the pressure is higher on that side? My thought is to only connect the compressor when the tank is empty. I don't want to connect it to the high-pressure side of the regulator, because I don't know if there are any quick-connect type fittings that will handle the 750-950 PSI they will see when disconnected. Also, if I somehow manage to connect the compressor to a full bottle, the result could be shrapnel-inducing.
My CO2 regulator has 4 ports. 2 high pressure, and 2 regulated (low pressure). If I connect the ARB compressor to one of the low pressure ports, will it fill the tank through the regulator? Will the regulator allow air flow in the reverse direction, if the pressure is higher on that side? My thought is to only connect the compressor when the tank is empty. I don't want to connect it to the high-pressure side of the regulator, because I don't know if there are any quick-connect type fittings that will handle the 750-950 PSI they will see when disconnected. Also, if I somehow manage to connect the compressor to a full bottle, the result could be shrapnel-inducing.