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M-F: 9 AM-7 PM PST
Call us at (725) 444-8355!
M-F: 9 AM-7 PM PST
Call (725) 444-8355!
M-F: 9 AM-7 PM PST
TL;DR: Most portable oil-free compressors deliver 2.0–5.0 CFM at 90 PSI: enough for nailers, impact wrenches, and finish work. Framing crews need 5.0 CFM and 200 PSI max for maximum stored air per cycle. Contractor and trade picks — framing, roofing, finish, multi-gun crews, and off-grid — are in the second half of this guide. For sustained high-draw tools (DA sander, blaster) or multiple simultaneous users, a portable won’t keep up.
The best portable air compressor depends entirely on what you’re using it for. A framing crew needs something different from a homeowner inflating tires, and a finish carpenter working in a finished basement needs something different again. By the end, you’ll know which portable compressor fits your use case, your tools, and how far you need to carry it.
Portable compressors span four distinct tiers: from 8-lb handheld inflators to 200-lb wheeled gas units, each designed for a different set of demands, as detailed by the Compressed Air Challenge. Which tier fits depends on whether you need one-hand carry, truck-bed transport, cord-free mobility, or dedicated inflation. The word portable covers a lot of ground. In the air compressor market, it can mean:
These are not interchangeable. Before looking at specific models, figure out which category your job falls into.
Carry by hand, short distances: 1–6 gallon pancake or hot dog — under 35 lbs, one-handed carry Truck-to-jobsite transport: 6–10 gallon with roll cage or handle — 40–55 lbs, two-handed or wheeled True cordless mobility: Battery-powered, 1–2 gallon — 15–25 lbs, no cord, limited run time Tire and light inflation only: Handheld inflator — 2–8 lbs, fits in a glove box
A single framing nailer draws 2.0–2.5 CFM at 90 PSI; a DA sander draws 6–9 CFM continuously. CAGI (Compressed Air and Gas Institute) test standards require CFM ratings to be measured at the compressor outlet at standardized pressure, which is why the 90 PSI spec number is the one that matters for tool matching, not the higher 40 PSI figure often listed alongside it.
| Tool | CFM at 90 PSI |
|---|---|
| Brad nailer | 0.3–0.5 |
| Finish nailer (15 or 16-gauge) | 0.5–1.0 |
| Framing nailer (stick) | 1.5–2.0 |
| Framing nailer (coil) | 2.0–2.5 |
| Roofing coil nailer | 1.5–2.5 |
| Air ratchet | 2.5–3.5 |
| Impact wrench (1/2”) | 3.0–5.0 |
| Die grinder | 4.0–6.0 |
| HVLP spray gun (mid-size) | 5.0–8.0 |
| DA sander | 6.0–9.0 |
| Tire inflation | Low volume, 100–150 PSI max |
Rule: Add up the CFM for every tool you might run at the same time, then add 25–30% buffer. A single framing nailer needs 2.5 CFM. Three framing nailers run simultaneously need 2.5 × 3 × 1.3 = 9.75 CFM — well beyond any portable unit.
Most portable oil-free compressors deliver 2.0–5.0 CFM at 90 PSI. That covers finish work, roofing, and most single-tool applications. It does not cover sanders, grinders, or multiple high-draw tools running simultaneously.
The six picks below cover CFM outputs from 2.0 to 5.0 at 90 PSI and noise levels from 60 to 80 dBA. If you’re deciding whether portable fits your long-term shop setup or whether you need a stationary unit, see Portable vs Stationary Air Compressor before committing to a portable.
| Use Case | Top Pick | CFM at 90 PSI | Tank | Weight | Noise |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jobsite / framing | Metabo HPT EC1315SM | 5.0 | 8 gal | 51 lbs | 80 dBA |
| Quiet indoor work | DeWalt DXCMS20045US | 5.0 | 4.5 gal | 46 lbs | 61 dBA |
| Home garage / DIY | California Air Tools 8010 | 2.2 | 8 gal | 54 lbs | 60 dBA |
| Cordless mobility | Metabo HPT EC36DAQ4 | 2.0 | 2 gal | 22 lbs | 72 dBA |
| Budget all-rounder | Ridgid OF60150HB | 3.0 | 6 gal | 40 lbs | ~78 dBA |
| Tire inflation only | DeWalt 20V MAX DXCM024 | — | 0.5 gal | 8 lbs | — |
For contractors, the Metabo HPT EC1315SM is the benchmark portable compressor in 2025. The nickname “The Tank” comes from its roll cage construction: it survives the kind of handling job sites demand. But the real advantage is its 200 PSI maximum pressure.
Higher max PSI means more air stored per tank cycle. At 200 PSI max vs. 150 PSI max, the same 8-gallon tank holds 33% more usable air. That translates directly into longer run time between motor kicks — critical when you’re framing and the nailer demand is continuous.
Key specs: - CFM at 90 PSI: 5.0 - Max PSI: 200 - Tank: 8 gallon - Noise: 80 dBA - Weight: 51 lbs - Motor startup: Low-amp — works on 15-amp circuits
Who it’s for: Framing crews, roofers, trim contractors, remodelers. Anyone who needs a compressor that fits in a truck bed, handles rough treatment, and recovers fast enough to keep up with multiple nailers.
What it can’t do: At 80 dBA, it’s loud. In a finished space with clients present, or in a basement where noise travels through the structure, the noise level is a real problem. Use one of the quieter options below for those situations.
Honest note on the 51 lb weight: It’s manageable for one person up and down stairs, but it’s not light. If your jobs involve a lot of stair climbing — interior remodels, second-floor work — the cordless option starts looking attractive even with its lower output.
DeWalt won the 2024 Pro Tool Innovation Award for this one, and it deserved it. The XTREME Quiet runs at 61 dBA (quieter than normal conversation) while delivering 5.0 CFM at 90 PSI and a 200 PSI max tank pressure. That’s essentially the same output as the Metabo HPT above, at roughly 20 dBA quieter.
Key specs: - CFM at 90 PSI: 5.0 - Max PSI: 200 - Tank: 4.5 gallon - Noise: 61 dBA - Weight: 46 lbs
The 4.5-gallon tank is smaller than the Metabo HPT’s 8-gallon, but the 200 PSI max partially compensates — the smaller tank stores more air per cycle than a 150 PSI max 6-gallon unit. For finish carpenters working in occupied homes, trim installers in upscale remodels, and anyone where “be quiet” is a job requirement, this is currently the best option on the market.
The tradeoff: Price. The XTREME Quiet runs significantly more than a pancake compressor with similar CFM output. You’re paying for the noise engineering. If quiet doesn’t matter for your application, spend the money elsewhere.
At 60 dBA, the California Air Tools 8010 is one of the quietest oil-free portables in its class. The 1680 RPM motor — vs. 3,450 RPM in most budget units — accounts for both the low noise and the extended pump life. Lower RPM means less heat, less wear, and longer intervals between pump failures. For a complete comparison of oil-free versus oiled compressor architectures including pump life and maintenance cost, see Oil-Free vs Oil Air Compressor.
Key specs: - CFM at 90 PSI: 2.2 - CFM at 40 PSI: 5.3 - Max PSI: 120 - Tank: 8 gallon - Noise: 60 dBA - Weight: 54 lbs - Pump life: ~3,000 hours
Who it’s for: Homeowners and hobbyists running nail guns, impact wrenches, tire inflation, and general garage work. The 60 dBA noise level means you can run it without ear protection and without complaints from neighbors.
The 120 PSI ceiling: Most competitors in this class run to 150–200 PSI max. The 8010 maxes at 120 PSI, which limits stored air per tank cycle compared to high-pressure competitors. For homeowner use, this rarely matters — 120 PSI is above what most pneumatic tools require. For a framing crew running multiple nailers, it becomes a constraint.
The cordless category has matured significantly. The Metabo HPT EC36DAQ4 runs off a 36V (two 18V) battery system and delivers legitimate tool-running performance — not just tire inflation like first-generation cordless compressors.
Key specs: - CFM at 90 PSI: 2.0 - Max PSI: 135 - Tank: 2 gallon - Noise: 72 dBA - Weight: 22 lbs (without battery) - Runtime: ~900 nails per charge (2Ah battery, framing nailer)
Who it’s for: Finish carpenters on stair-heavy jobs, trim installers working in areas without outlets, remote jobsite work, roofing where running extension cords is a hazard. The 2 CFM output covers finish nailers, brad nailers, and roofing nailers without issue. Impact wrenches and sanders need more — cordless compressors aren’t there yet for high-draw tools.
The battery ecosystem tradeoff: The EC36DAQ4 uses Metabo HPT’s Multi-Volt 36V battery. If you’re already in the Metabo HPT ecosystem, this is a natural extension. If you’re running DeWalt or Milwaukee tools, you’re buying into a new battery platform. Some users keep one corded compressor and one cordless inflator — different tools for different jobs.
Makita MAC100Q as an alternative: For users in the Makita ecosystem, the MAC100Q runs off standard Makita 18V batteries (two in series), weighs 23 lbs, and operates at 58 dBA. Output is slightly lower at 1.6 CFM at 90 PSI, but the quiet operation and Makita battery compatibility make it a strong alternative for finish work.
The Ridgid 6-gallon pancake is consistently rated the best value portable compressor for buyers who need a capable machine without spending on premium brands. It runs at 3.0 CFM at 90 PSI — adequate for nailers and light tool use — and carries Ridgid’s lifetime service agreement (LSA), which is unusually strong warranty coverage for the price.
Key specs: - CFM at 90 PSI: 3.0 - Max PSI: 150 - Tank: 6 gallon - Noise: ~78 dBA - Weight: 40 lbs
The 3.0 CFM limitation: This is enough for brad nailers, finish nailers, and tire inflation without issue. For framing nailers running hard, you’ll notice the motor cycling frequently. For impact wrenches running continuously, it’s at the edge. Know your tools before buying budget.
Why Ridgid over PORTER-CABLE or Craftsman at the same price? The Ridgid LSA. Lifetime service agreements are rare in power tools. If the compressor needs service, Ridgid handles it at no charge for the life of the tool. For a budget purchase, that coverage changes the long-term value equation.
If tire inflation is your primary use — cars, trucks, bikes, sports equipment — a dedicated inflator beats a full compressor on every practical dimension. Lighter, faster to deploy, fits in a glove box or truck door pocket, and charges off the same 20V battery most people already own.
Key specs: - Max PSI: 150 - Weight: 8 lbs - Runtime: 6 car tires from 0 on a 2Ah battery - Auto shut-off at preset PSI
Who it’s for: Drivers who want roadside tire capability, fleet vehicles, trucks and SUVs where keeping a full compressor is impractical, RV and trailer maintenance.
What it can’t do: Run pneumatic tools. It is not a substitute for a compressor that powers nailers or impact wrenches — it’s a dedicated inflation tool.
A shop compressor and a jobsite compressor solve different problems. In a shop, you plug into a dedicated 240V circuit, the unit sits on a rubber mat, and it never moves. On a jobsite, you’re dragging it across concrete, running it off a 15A extension cord from a temporary panel, and leaving it in a truck bed overnight at 20°F. Three specs determine whether a portable compressor survives those demands:
CFM output at 90 PSI. This is the number that tells you whether the compressor keeps up with your tool. Framing guns need 2.2–2.5 CFM. Finish nailers run 0.5–1.0 CFM. An HVLP spray gun needs 4–14 CFM depending on the model. If the compressor can’t match or exceed your tool’s demand, you wait — and on a jobsite, waiting costs money.
Duty cycle. Most portable jobsite compressors run at 50–70% duty cycle, meaning for every 10 minutes of operation, they need 3–5 minutes of rest. Push a 50% duty cycle unit harder and you’ll burn out the motor in six months. Oil-lubricated units handle higher duty cycles better than oil-free for sustained use.
Weight vs. tank size trade-off. A 6-gallon pancake weighs 30 lbs and fits under a workbench. A 10-gallon twin-stack weighs 60 lbs and needs two hands. For roof work or finish carpentry, lighter wins. For running multiple guns at a framing site, tank capacity matters more.
A unit with the right CFM but a 50% duty cycle burns out in months under framing conditions; the right spec combination runs 4–5 years under the same load.
The following picks are selected specifically for trade professionals — sustained daily use, rough transport, and the CFM profiles of commercial work.
Finish carpentry is the one trade where noise actually gets you kicked off a site or out of a client’s home. The MAC2400 runs at 79 dBA — loud by shop standards, but quiet for an oil-lubricated compressor in this class.
The oil-lubricated pump is what sets it apart. Finish work often runs 4–6 hours continuously — crown molding, baseboard, door casing, stair treads. Oil-lubricated compressors handle sustained use without heat buildup. Oil-free units in the same price range run hot and loud over long sessions.
The 4.2-gallon twin-stack tank looks small, but the 4.2 CFM at 90 PSI output is the real story — plenty for a 15-gauge nailer running all day. The big-bore cylinder fills fast, so recovery time between shots is minimal.
Key specs: - CFM at 90 PSI: 4.2 - Max PSI: 130 - Tank: 4.2 gal twin-stack - Weight: 79 lbs - Motor: 2.5 HP oil-lubricated - Noise: 79 dBA
Best for: Interior trim, cabinetry install, finish nail work Limitation: 79 lbs — needs a dolly or two people to move between floors
Roofing compressors live a rough life — UV exposure, temperature swings from 10°F to 100°F in the same week, vibration from riding in truck beds, and getting dropped off ladders. The BTFP02012 is built for it: oil-free (no oil changes mid-job in the cold), 6-gallon pancake (low center of gravity, won’t tip), and weighs 30 lbs with a handle designed for one-hand carry up a ladder.
At 2.6 CFM at 90 PSI, it keeps pace with roofing coil nailers drawing 1.5–2.0 CFM under normal load. The 150 PSI max tank pressure means a full tank holds more air — longer run time between cycles, fewer interruptions.
The oil-free design is a real advantage for roofing specifically. Changing oil at pitch on a residential roof is a mess. In sub-freezing temps, cold-start on oil-lubricated compressors is notoriously unreliable. Oil-free starts in the cold without protest.
Key specs: - CFM at 90 PSI: 2.6 - Max PSI: 150 - Tank: 6 gal pancake - Weight: 30 lbs - Motor: 1.5 HP oil-free - Noise: 82 dBA
Best for: Shingle installation, roofing coil nailers, gutter work Limitation: 82 dBA — not suitable for interior work in occupied buildings
When you’ve got a crew running two framing nailers, a roofing coil nailer, and someone occasionally inflating a tire, you need a tank that doesn’t run dry every 90 seconds. The DWFP55130 delivers 5.0 CFM at 90 PSI with a 10-gallon tank, and the high-efficiency motor handles that output without overheating during extended use.
The 78 PSI startup pressure means you can draw from the tank earlier in the fill cycle — more usable air per fill. Most compressors in this range don’t let you start drawing until 100+ PSI, which wastes tank volume.
Key specs: - CFM at 90 PSI: 5.0 - Max PSI: 135 - Tank: 10 gal - Weight: 59 lbs - Motor: 1.5 HP oil-free - Noise: 80 dBA
Best for: Multi-trade crews, framing + finish combination, high-volume nail work Limitation: Too heavy to carry solo up stairs
For jobs with no power — pole barn builds in the middle of a field, fence repair miles from an outlet, or running a nailer before power gets connected — the CAT-4610AC is the pick. It runs on a 4.0 Ah lithium battery with a 1-gallon tank. Light finish nailing (one shot every 10 seconds) gets 60–90 minutes of runtime. Heavier framing use cuts that to 30–40 minutes.
At 1.2 CFM at 90 PSI, this isn’t a high-output unit — it won’t keep two guns running simultaneously. It’s a one-gun solution for remote work.
Key specs: - CFM at 90 PSI: 1.2 - Max PSI: 120 - Tank: 1 gal - Battery: 4.0 Ah Li-Ion - Weight: 22 lbs - Noise: 68 dBA
Best for: Remote sites without power, light repair work, single-gun setup Limitation: CFM limits it to one tool at a time; battery life requires planning
At $110–130, the C2002 is the most common compressor in residential contractor trucks. It’s not the best at anything specific, but it’s adequate for finish and light framing work and cheap enough that losing it to theft or a three-story drop isn’t a disaster. The 2.6 CFM at 90 PSI handles standard finish nailers and brad nailers. If you’re a solo contractor doing one-man finish work and don’t want to spend $400+ on a Makita, this is the honest budget choice.
Key specs: - CFM at 90 PSI: 2.6 - Max PSI: 150 - Tank: 6 gal pancake - Weight: 30 lbs - Motor: 1.5 HP oil-free - Noise: 82 dBA
Best for: Solo finish carpentry, light framing, budget-constrained contractors Limitation: Not built for sustained heavy use; service life shorter than oil-lubed units at equivalent price points
Cordless compressors top out at 2–3 CFM at 90 PSI — enough for finish nailers and brad nailers, not enough for impact wrenches, sanders, or high-draw tools. The cordless category has genuine advantages now, but it doesn’t make sense for every user. Here’s when to pick each:
Choose corded when: - You have consistent access to power on the job - You need more than 2–3 CFM at 90 PSI - You run the compressor for extended periods (motor can’t heat-soak like a battery) - Budget matters — corded units cost less for equivalent output
Choose cordless when: - Jobs involve stair climbing, tight spaces, or frequent repositioning - Power access is unreliable or running cords is a safety issue (roofing, outdoor work) - You’re running finish nailers and brad nailers only — 2 CFM covers these - You’re already in a compatible battery ecosystem
The hybrid approach that actually works: Keep one corded unit for heavy shop use and jobsite work with power access. Add one cordless inflator (dedicated, not a full compressor) for the truck. This covers 90% of use cases without the compromises of relying on a single cordless compressor for everything.
Pancake compressors dominate the 6–8 gallon portable market because their low center of gravity prevents tipping on uneven surfaces — the wide base is a functional safety advantage on rough ground and decking. This matters more for jobsite work than it looks on paper.
Pancake: Low center of gravity, stable on uneven surfaces, wide footprint. Best for jobsites where the compressor sits on rough ground or decking. Most 6–8 gallon portables use this design.
Hot dog: Cylindrical tank mounted horizontally. Narrower footprint than pancake, easier to carry under one arm. Common in 2–4 gallon smaller units. Less stable on uneven ground than pancake.
Twin-stack: Two horizontal tanks stacked vertically. More tank volume in a narrower footprint — useful when you need more air reserve but don’t want the wide pancake base. Slightly higher center of gravity. Less common now that high-pressure (200 PSI) pancakes match their stored air volume.
For most jobsite and home garage use: pancake. For tight storage or when a narrower footprint matters: twin-stack. Hot dog for the smallest 1–2 gallon portables.
CFM at 40 PSI is regularly listed alongside CFM at 90 PSI in compressor specs, and the 40 PSI number is always higher — sometimes by 30–50%. Most pneumatic tools run at 70–90 PSI, so the 90 PSI number is the only one that determines tool compatibility. Five spec points separate compressors that work from those that disappoint.
Compressor specs often show CFM at 40 PSI alongside CFM at 90 PSI. The 40 PSI number is always higher — sometimes dramatically so. Most pneumatic tools run at 70–90 PSI. Buy based on the 90 PSI number.
Max PSI tells you how full the tank gets. Working PSI is what your tools need. A 200 PSI max compressor running tools at 90 PSI has 110 PSI of usable reserve above the working pressure — meaning longer run time before the motor kicks in compared to a 120 PSI max unit.
How fast does the motor refill the tank after it drops to the low-pressure cutoff? Manufacturers don’t always publish this, but it affects real-world usability. A 2-HP motor refills faster than a 1-HP motor at the same tank size. If you’re running tools that cycle air fast (framing nailer, impact wrench), recovery time matters as much as tank size.
Some compressor motors draw 12–15 amps at startup — enough to trip a 15-amp circuit if other loads are on it. The Metabo HPT EC1315SM is specifically designed for low-amp startup to avoid this. Check startup draw before plugging into a shared circuit.
The drain valve removes moisture from the tank after use — skip this and the tank corrodes from the inside. On pancake compressors, the drain valve is on the bottom of the tank. Some designs make this easy to reach; others require tipping the unit. Check before buying if you’ll be using the compressor frequently.
Quality oil-lubricated jobsite compressors last 7–10 years under full-time contractor use; oil-free units last 3–5 years under the same conditions. For how these service life numbers translate across compressor types and quality tiers, see How Long Do Air Compressors Last. How you transport and store the unit determines whether it reaches those numbers.
Secure it properly. A 30–60 lb compressor sliding around a truck bed is a liability — to the compressor and to anything else back there. Use ratchet straps through the carry handle. A loose compressor in a moving truck will develop cracked fittings and loose hose connections faster than any amount of hard daily use.
Drain the tank daily. Condensation inside the tank accelerates rust from the inside out. Even oil-free units build up moisture. 30 seconds at the drain valve at the end of the day adds years to service life.
Cold weather startup. Below 40°F, let an oil-lubricated unit run unloaded for 2–3 minutes before drawing air. Cold oil doesn’t circulate properly at startup. Skipping this step is the single biggest reason oil-lubricated jobsite compressors fail prematurely.
Extension cord sizing. An undersized extension cord drops voltage and stresses the motor. For a 15-amp compressor: - Up to 25 feet: 14 AWG minimum - 25–50 feet: 12 AWG minimum - 50–100 feet: 10 AWG minimum
Running a heavy compressor on a 16 AWG extension cord causes voltage sag that burns motors. The damage accumulates invisibly until the motor gives out.
Three questions cut 90% of jobsite compressor decisions. Before buying, answer these:
1. What’s your highest-CFM tool? That’s your floor. The compressor must meet or beat it.
2. How many tools run at the same time? Add CFM demands for simultaneous use, add 25% buffer, and that’s your minimum output.
3. Do you have power at the site? No power = cordless or gas. Power available = corded electric covers 95% of jobsite needs.
If your highest tool is a framing nailer (2.5 CFM), you’re running one gun at a time, and power is available — the Bostitch BTFP02012 and the Metabo HPT EC1315SM both work; the decision comes down to weight versus tank size preference.
If you’re running multi-gun crews with power available, the DeWalt DWFP55130 is the straightforward answer at $250–280.
A single framing nailer needs 2.0–2.5 CFM at 90 PSI. For one nailer, a 6-gallon compressor delivering 3.0+ CFM handles it fine. For two nailers running simultaneously, you need 5.0+ CFM and a larger tank — the Metabo HPT EC1315SM (5.0 CFM, 8 gallon, 200 PSI max) or DeWalt DWFP55130 (5.0 CFM, 10 gallon) is the standard recommendation. Three or more nailers running hard will outrun any portable unit.
Yes, for intermittent use. A 1/2” impact wrench needs 3.0–5.0 CFM at 90 PSI. A 6-gallon compressor at 3.0 CFM can run a 1/2” impact for burst use — loosening lug nuts, running bolts. For sustained use (extended wrenching, automotive work), the motor will struggle to keep up and you’ll wait on recovery between uses. For heavy impact wrench work, a larger stationary compressor is more practical.
Yes, if the compressor CFM output matches or exceeds the combined demand. Add up the CFM ratings of each gun and add a 25% buffer. A 4.2 CFM compressor can run a framing nailer (2.2 CFM) and a finish nailer (0.8 CFM) simultaneously — that’s 3.0 CFM combined against 4.2 CFM available. Running two framing nailers (4.4–5.0 CFM combined) off a 2.6 CFM unit won’t work.
Oil-free is easier to maintain and starts reliably in cold weather. Oil-lubricated lasts longer under heavy sustained use and runs quieter. For light-to-moderate contractor use, oil-free is the practical choice. For finish carpenters running 4–6 hour sessions daily, oil-lubricated pays back in service life.
Most jobsite nailers and staplers operate at 70–120 PSI. A tank rated at 150 PSI holds more usable air volume per fill, which means longer run time between cycles — even if your tools never see more than 90 PSI working pressure. Higher max PSI is useful; just don’t confuse max tank pressure with operating pressure.
A 6-gallon tank at 150 PSI from empty typically fills in 2–3 minutes with a 1–2 HP motor. An 8-gallon tank at 200 PSI takes 3–4 minutes. Recovery time — refilling from the low-pressure cutoff to max after use — is typically 30–90 seconds depending on how much air was drawn down.
For finish carpenters and trim installers who move frequently and don’t always have power access, yes. The Metabo HPT EC36DAQ4 and Makita MAC100Q both deliver legitimate nailer-grade performance. For framing, impact wrenches, and anything above 3 CFM demand, cordless isn’t there yet — stick with corded.
Tank shape. Pancake compressors have a flat round tank with a low center of gravity — stable on uneven surfaces and common in 6–8 gallon portables. Hot dog compressors have a cylindrical horizontal tank, narrower footprint, easier to carry under one arm. For jobsite use, pancake is more stable. For storage in tight spaces, hot dog is narrower.
Match the compressor to the job:
Buy based on your actual CFM requirement and the most important constraint for your situation — noise, weight, power access, or budget. The compressor that covers your tools without being oversized for your transport situation is always the right call.
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