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Mrodair Airmax Compressor Review: Prep, Poor Build Quality, Fixes, Ultimately Unsafe for Use

For those working on their MrodAir Airmax Extreme compressor, this thread is both a resource and report of my own experience. Work on my compressor evolved over time. Initially, the focus was preparing the compressor for a longer life, easier maintenance scheduling, and safer operation. As issues were discovered, this devolved into troubleshooting, fixes, and currently finding my compressor unsafe to use until an oil-in-air problem fix is found at Mrodair.

You can follow my journey beginning in October last year http://www.talonairgun.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=52&t=33430
This thread is that Guinea Pig thread’s more useful successor.

The first few posts in this thread cover major topics. The major topic posts continually undergo editing to keep information up to date. They do not attempt to preserve chronology. Posts after the major topics are chronologic, just as in any normal thread.

NB. Changes in the major topic posts are not flagged as new by the BBS system.

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Disclaimer: Material presented here may be incomplete or inaccurate.
Work you undertake on a compressor is expressly at your own risk.
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Introduction

I pre-ordered my Airmax compressor from MrodAir after watching their product introduction video and reading the website. My impression was that the compressor would be a mid-priced, mid-performance machine suitable for my limited, single shooter needs. The promise that a US outfit would be going over the units and making sure they worked was reassuring. With its advertised “silicon bronze rings”, “3 cylinders”, and real pistons, this seemed a happy medium between an o-ring based compressor and the “overkill” of a dive compressor.

We were reassured by MrodAir that each unit would be tested and that they had arranged many upgrades. These compressors would be long lasting, “real deal” compressors. As an airgun newbie, I was unfamiliar with MrodAir. There were some negative online reviews, but I also know that online reviews often trend towards the negative – even unfairly. I took a chance, ordered a compressor, and promised to report my experience on this forum.

My desire was a compressor that would let me fill or top up a tank reliably. I was only a single shooter, but the convenience of ready air was enticing. Also, the ability to use high air consuming items, like regulator testers, made a compressor/tank combo a nice step up from hand pumping.

My experience has not been consistent with a ready to go, fully developed product. Others have fared both better and worse than I. There are issues potential buyers should know before purchase.

False Advertising
There were factual inaccuracies in the product advertising at MrodAir. These incorrect details affected my decision to place an order. Had they been accurate, I might not have placed an order.

As described on the product page when I ordered the machine…

quote :

Finally a real 110 compressor…….True 3 cylinder, with real pistons and rings made from silicon bronze for long service life…

No, this is a TWO stage compressor. Only two cylinders do actual compression. Although the 2nd stage piston rides atop a carrier piston, that carrier piston does zero compression work. It is drilled through and lacks air inlet or outlet. It is simply not a compression cylinder. The compressor can still achieve 4500 psi by making the two stages work harder, but the 3 cylinder count is a factual error. I am only counting cylinders that perform compression. Otherwise, one could lash a six-pack of beer to the compressor and dub it a 9 cylinder compressor. Two cylinders means each must do more work than in a three stage machine. There is also less chance for interstage cooling of the compressed air.

Silicon bronze piston rings were prominently mentioned as a feature of the compressor. This gave the impression that rebuild intervals would be consistent with that of metal piston rings. I was surprised to find my 2nd stage piston rings were not metallic. The rings resisting the greatest heat and pressure, are polymer
Several other owners confirmed that the high pressure cylinder rings. I informed MrodAir and the initial reaction was that I was wrong. Their website continued to advertise these compressors as having silicon bronze rings for several days more.

quote :

….the new Airmax Extreme and it IS a true 3 cylinder HPA compressor, with real pistons and high pressure rings made from silicon bronze, suspended in phenolic resin for long service life…..The low pressure cylinder, has traditional cast iron rings.

Piston ring description was adjusted as of 4/22/2016. The high pressure rings are now described as silicon bronze suspended in phenolic resin and the low pressure rings as traditional cast iron. The number of cylinders advertised remains three.

Because the 2nd stage rings are now known to be a less durable material than silicon bronze, having replacements is even more important. The high pressure rings look like angle cut wear rings. They are soft and easily indent with a fingernail. Heat, flame and smell testing of one from my compressor makes me think these are actually silicon bronze filled PTFE wear rings. I would like to find a second source. I have yet to find a source for bronze filled phenolic resin rings, but silicon bronze filled PTFE wear rings do exist.

Durability and duty cycle should be scaled back in your mind. Filling a 88 cf tank in one session stresses the compressor to its limit. A reasonable expectation would be to top off a tank once in a while or fill a gun directly. Long term torture testing suggests 20 minute max run times. http://www.gatewaytoairguns.org/GTA/index.php?topic=107945.0

Technically, the compressors are 120 volt units, but they need a 30 amp service outlet to run properly. A 20 amp circuit is insufficient. My own unit draws about 24-27 amps during operation. It is simply too large a current draw to safely run on a 20 amp circuit. Perhaps one could get away with it for filling a gun directly, but topping or filling a tank is asking a lot of a 20 amp circuit.

Electrical Hazard
My unit arrived with two major electrical components (relay and contactor) hanging loose. Each was held in place only by the wires connected to them. A consumer who receives the machine reasonably expects safe and secure wiring. If your unit arrives in the state mine did, disaster will happen in short order.

The compressor is not grounded. Grounding pin of its AC power socket is connected to ….. nothing. This machine has a semi-open, metal frame, uses water for cooling, and is not grounded.

An under capacity 15 amp IEC receptacle connects the AC power cord to the compressor. The IEC connector is only 15 amp rated, well below the actual current draw of the compressor. The IEC power connector can overheat or starve the machine of adequate power.

Electrical wring skills can correct these shortcomings. It is doable, but for a vetted design and build, the average buyer should not need to do electrical rework.

Air Quality with Heavy Oil Contamination, (Critical Go/No Go Safety Item)
My unit, and that of some other owners, continually passes oil from the crankcase into the low pressure cylinder. Oil that gets into the air path oxidizes (maybe even diesels) at the high pressure cylinder, fouling that cylinder’s rings and valves. The remaining oil goes on to the water separator and MUST be filtered out before it reaches a gun or tank. A little oil is not uncommon for a compressor, but it must be removed with a filter before it gets into your tank or gun. My unit splatters oil all about in the low pressure cylinder. Bleeding the separator filled my garage with suspended oil vapor. Not all units have this problem. Mine does and so do some other owner’s. This is distinct from being shipped with oil in the crankcase. It’s actively putting more oil into the cylinder with each stroke.

This oiling issue should be tested before one puts the compressor into use. An affected compressor will still fill a tank. Merely testing whether the compressor will fill a tank is insufficient. You should disconnect the air output of the 1st stage and specifically check for continued oil output before you try a pressurized run. Without my large, Alpha filter, this would have been an oil in the tank disaster. With my Alpha, it is still a problem. A filter can only handle do so much. Filters are meant to deal with the the last traces of oil, not heavy contamination. Oil in your high pressure air system is an explosion hazard and may negatively affect seals in your guns.

Summary
There are indeed MrodAir upgrades like the automatic cutoff gauge and radiator. Those are useful, but one needs to go over these units carefully before use. Expect to do electrical and mechanical work to keep them running. Mine, as delivered, was neither turnkey nor ready to use. Ultimately, mine had such severe oil contamination issues that it was unusable and no fix was forthcoming from Mrodair. On the up side, the compressor is easy to tear down and work upon. If good parts were available, and fixes developed, one could conceivably keep a unit running until one could afford a more robust solution. Just anticipate needing your mechanical and electrical skills.

The compressor does fill fast – perhaps too fast for its own good, Takes about 80-90 minutes to fill a Great White from empty to 4500 that’s with frequent bleeding. It’s just a tad over 1 CFM. You can actually see the pressure gauge of a Great White move as the compressor works. However, there are reliability, longevity, duty cycle, and oil contamination issues that need working through. I never got mine sorted after months of patient work.

My story follows. You will learn about initial inspection, electrical, air leaks, oil in air contamination, and blowouts. There is even a down trodden me “throwing in the towel” and ready to scrap the machine after first discovering heavy oil contamination and suffering another o-ring blowout while filling a tank.

I think one might get this compressor to marginally work directly filling a gun or a small cylinder, but expect very slow to no customer support if you encounter real issues. This is a machine built to the barest margins possible to still run. It has no pressure safety releases and should not be run more than 15 – 20 minutes at a time. You need electrical and mechanical skills to keep things in good order. This is of course, if you get a good unit in the first place. Test thoroughly when it arrives. You are the factory’s last quality control step.

Guy

Main Topic Posts Index

30 amp 120 volt RV service outlet Installation.
http://www.talonairgun.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=52&t=34635#p357139

Delivered Components
http://www.talonairgun.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=52&t=34635#p357140

Initial Inspection
http://www.talonairgun.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=52&t=34635#p357141

inspection of cylinders for oil seepage during shipment
http://www.talonairgun.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=52&t=34635#p357142

Opening Crank Case for Complete Oil Change (No, not for routine changes!)
http://www.talonairgun.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=52&t=34635#p357143

Electrical Fixes and Upgrades
http://www.talonairgun.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=52&t=34635#p357145

High Pressure Valve and Water Separator
http://www.talonairgun.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=52&t=34635#p357146

Automatic Pressure Switch Gauge Glycerin
http://www.talonairgun.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=52&t=34635#p357147

Water Cooling System
http://www.talonairgun.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=52&t=34635#p357148

Piston and Piston Ring Measurements
http://www.talonairgun.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=52&t=34635&start=60#p359151

O-ring Sizes
http://www.talonairgun.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=52&t=34635&start=40#p358769

Latest changes
5/21/2016
No Mrodair fix for the oil in air contamination issues. Lower pressure cylinder consumes oil severely. Small engine shop evaluation suggested piston and cylinder tolerance are too large to ever effect a seal. Without a way to fix that problem, the compressor is unsafe to use. My unit is now going to another victim/owner for use as a parts donor.

If you are contemplating this compressor… my painfully earned advice is to buy from a different dealer and get a Shoebox or save up for a full scale dive compressor. The Mrodair Airmax Extreme compressor is a poor quality product you will most likely regret.

Compressors, tanks and pumps

All Replies

Viewing 15 replies - 16 through 30 (of 267 total)

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Warranty?

It’s always the customers fault it breaks remember.

Crankshaft… Not cam.
I would suggest coltri 750 or similar oil for hpa use. Higher viscosity and so less oil consumption.
Crank is threaded ccw, so it shouldn’t loosen it by it self. If it has been loose the key might have severed and thus not spinning the pump.
Marko

Edit: these are all so new machines and should be covered under warranty by nimrodair.

Look early in this thread for picts of the crankcase and camshaft.

Careful with the bolts, the crankcase housing is quite fragile aluminum and easy to strip. Also, don’t damage the crankcase gasket.

thankyou Guykuo
is the cam what the electric motor turns ?
yes the electric motor runs & compressor does not
i guess i will take it apart
does anybody have picts ?

thanks
Dick

The cam is held on the shaft by a single clamping bolt. That may have come loose if your motor is spinning without the cam moving.

well it gave up the ghost after a total of 6 1/2 hours run time
seems something broke between the electric motor and the compressor 🙁
if you have had yours apart, any picts ?

quote Strever:

Tbear
i’m one of the 50 and i don’t say much just read
after reading about the purple you bought, i also got some off Amazon and i changed oil in mine
now it will not fill my tanks above 4100 #’s ? it use to do 4600 no problem
tilting to empty did something, what ? i don’t know
what O’rings did you change ? and what size are they ?

thanks
Dick

Sorry that changing your oil caused you to lose pressure. Must be something else though…did you do anything else?
As for o-ring sizes, I did switched all to viton, don’t have the size right now. Hopefully sometime can chime in.

Before considering buying a Mrodair.com Compressor be forewarned many have found it to be nothing but trouble dealing with the machine as well as the vendor

If your pump isn’t pumping to full you should start with a spray bottle and dish liquid to find air leaks on the high side. If you can’t find any leaks then start looking at rings and seals.

Tbear
i’m one of the 50 and i don’t say much just read
after reading about the purple you bought, i also got some off Amazon and i changed oil in mine
now it will not fill my tanks above 4100 #’s ? it use to do 4600 no problem
tilting to empty did something, what ? i don’t know
what O’rings did you change ? and what size are they ?

thanks
Dick

The Airmax electrical system is atypical in that manually switching of the compressor forces the 15 amp rated power switch to break a 25 amp current flow. Most motor control systems that have a contactor make and break the heavy current flow via the contactor’s heavier contacts rather than the relatively low capacity switches. While the circuit design does indeed make the circuit via the contactor and break the circuit via the contactor if the auto gauge signals its limit, manually turning off the compressor turns things off via the switch rather than the contactor.

This makes the Airmax prone to arc, burn out, or welding “on” its power switch. I had an incident of this when the power switch welded itself on. Turning of the switch didn’t do anything. The Airmax kept running. Several off/on flips finally broke the contacts apart. If that had failed the next step would have been pulling the plug or redialing the pressure gauge switch.

This problem can be largely moderated by rewiring the system to add proper start & stop buttons to control the contactor’s coil instead of the motor directly. Here is what the circuitry might look like. This implementation will also prevent the compressor from unexpectedly restarting after a power failure. The on button must be pushed to start the motor. Also, the motor won’t restart until pressure drops below the gauge set point. The relay is rewired to convert the normally open pressure gauge into a normally closed contact.

As usual, your wiring skills and safety are up to you. The circuit design is presented as unverified. Don’t do wiring modification unless you understand the actual wiring, verify for yourself the circuit design, and take electrical safety precautions.

I don’t smell anything bad.

quote tbear:

I decided to go with Royal purple because it’s readily available for $20 on Amazon, with free prime shipping. The quart size is good for 2 fills. I read the specs and seems like a good fit. Flash point is 500F.

https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B004PL9BVY/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o03_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1

tbear how stinky is that Royal Purple?

Yikes! That’s pretty impressive on a brand new unit. Glad to have been of help.

Looked more closely at your low p cylinder picts. There is some debris down near the piston, probably junk from the valves. Be sure to also clean that out so it can’t abrade the cylinder walls and rings.

guykuo – many thanks for the troubleshoot :winkn: I did tear down the low side and man, looky what I found. I sent this to mike and he’s sending replacements asap.

Viewing 15 replies - 16 through 30 (of 267 total)

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