18:57 It's better to drain the tank from the lever at the bottom than the emergency pin at the back. Besides depressurizing, you also want to get rid of any moisture than built up inside otherwise you could have rust problems. Also you can lock in the pressure regulator with the red ring under the knob.
I've never been overly concerned about compressor noise but then again I often wear ear defenders at my spray both, primarily to reduce the fan roar noise. I have a large very high flow rate fan on my spray booth bought many years ago in the days when solvent based paints were pretty much our only option. Once ear defenders are on then the compressor cutting in is never a huge issue. But this is a very quiet compressor, so much so that that I may well consider a "quiet" compressor when mine eventually dies as all machinery eventually does. Beyond that it is very rare that I disagree with any of your comments and recommendations but this time I'd like to offer two rebuttals. First, buy the compressor with the largest tank that you can afford and fit into the location intended for the compressor. Most of us are not as "frugal" with air use as you so that invariably means the compressor will cycle several times during an airbrushing session - especially when drying acrylic paints as you have often demonstrated. So if the costs are similar in this case the two gallon equipped compressor is the more prudent and long lasting buy. The larger tank will ultimately mean fewer cycles on the compressor and that means a longer calendar life for the compressor. It also reduces the number of pressure cycles on the tank which further protects against fatigue failure. Secondly, while the moisture trap/filter at the airbrush is certainly a good idea to protect the airbrush itself, I very strongly recommend fitting a moisture trap/ air dryer between the compressor and the secondary pressure regulator. All regulators but especially the finer control low flow rate air pressure regulators need clean dry air or will tend to corrode and/or easily get clogged by debris, worse yet if you have one of the lower priced ones made from mild steel which many of us do when building our first airbrush/compressor system. Finally, when using two regulators as illustrated here the primary regulator at the compressor tank should be at least 30 psi higher than the final airbrush pressure. In this case I recommend the on-compressor regulator be set at 50 to 60 psi. That way the secondary regulator is still lowering the pressure by 30-45 psi which helps ensure its output pressure is more stable.
I got the California air compressor I got a scratch and dent floor model for$125 . I never found a scratch or dent. It super quiet and shipping was free. Drain the tank every three months. Humidity here inNO LA is usually over 90% and there is never moisture in my built in moisture trap. Good advice from someone on running the first valve at 30 psi over running pressure for me that 50 to 55. I use 55 so I can run my brush up to 30 for cleaning. Well within ab factory specs but helpful. Good job!
Good to know there are alternatives, but beyond happy with my California Air Tools. The ability to run the compressor in the garage below sleeping kids bedrooms is invaluable.
I recently purchased a 2 gal Fortress based on the reviews from several of the other miniature painters with TH-cam channels, and that's the way I'll be setting mine up -- the water trap on a quick disconnect from the side fitting, and the airbrush hose from that; I've got all the fittings to put a quick disconnect on each side of the water trap, so with the one on the brush I'll be able to take it all down quickly. I will soon have a spray booth to trap overspray, and then I'll be good to start practicing.
Nice. I've been using the two gal for a few years and love it. Handles the air brushes easy as well as various nailers, air blower, tire filler, etc...
Just bought this and broke it in for 30 minutes but curious what’s the point? Literally what will happen if someone never breaks it in? Won’t the same net result occur as one accumulates 30 min of runtime? I know building engines it’s important to break in the piston rings to match the block bore crosshatch but I am nor sure these air compressors are that high-precision...
@@Syclone0044some, not all. Do require a break-in period. To allow components to seat themselves properly. Now.. why this needs to be done all at once vs while you are using the tool. I agree. I do not understand the difference.
Maybe the “wearing in” of components is best done when not under load. When my wife gets frustrated with my performance I do remind her that she did not follow the marriage break in period and hence it’s understandable that i am not operating at my full potential
I run a old moisture trap that takes a roll of toilet paper which goes into a small 3-way manifold. It seriously saved on buying adaptors for all my Paasche's just to use 1 standard air hose for Paasche,Harder,Badger and a Iwata.
I use that compressor for my airbrushing. And I have a small airbrush for model railroading. Just added a water separator via a quick connect couple. Works like a charm and super quiet.
You can buy an airbrush hose with the proper adapter fitting right from Harbor Freight. Its $8 if I recall correctly. It's what I use with my 2gal Fortress compressor with zero issues. I am gonna have to check out one of those digital regulators for sure, looks handy!
i have used this compressor for about 4 or 5 years for air brushing and finish air nailer. it has preformed flawlessly. i got mine with a coupon for 90 bucks to boot.
what is your use case? do you spray all day (prime, wait, 1st coat) or just pieces? I'm only a master grade 1/100 gundam mainly so I'm concerned tank is too small, so looking at the Stealth brand, looks to be a carbon copy, same eveyrthing but with 3 gall at $199.
Good call on the digital gauge. The gauge that comes with it requires you to kind of estimate the psi. It is as quiet as my Silentaire Scorpion II-TT compressor that was $349.00 and it does not have to start up as often either. Mine is 2 years old and has had ZERO issues.
Already mentioned, but draining the tank using the bottom drain is the only way to get all the water out of the tank. Pulling the pressure relief valve will leave much of the water in the tank. I am anxious to see how the Grex spray gun works with your new compressor and just works in general. As a car modeler the fan spray nozzle and larger needle are of interest and I have heard that smaller compressors can't keep up. I think your one gallon will do fine but I'd like to know before I buy. You spend it and I save it! Thanks for all you do.
drain the air tank from the bottom valve every time when it is not in use this will keep the moisture out of the air supply tank and will prolong the life of the compressor. I have the 26 Gallon fortress and it will fill from empty to full in five minutes quieter than most.
The black one has a high pitched whistle that would drive me crazy. I have the 2 gal Fortress and its run perfectly for the 3 years I have had it. I have used mine to air brush shirts and even run a half inch air wrench to take lug nuts off my Jeep. Very nice quality compressor.
I bought this a few weeks back for getting into airbrushing - mainly because it wasn't a single-use device and wasn't that much more expensive than tanked "dedicated" hobby compressor. It can go to a high pressure, it has a decent tank size, and for what it is, it doesn't weight much. I can fill tires with it, airbrush, take off wheels. It's amazing for $159, being a double piston design - to get this level of features in a "hobby" compressor, I was looking at $300+. I also bought a secondary low-psi regulator for it that is by my booth. So I have 30 PSI out from the compressor running into 18 PSI at the secondary regulator to the airbrush. So far it's been amazing. The only complaint is that the vibration it puts out on a hard floor surface may be disturbing to people in other rooms, but if you have carpeted floors, that should deaden the vibration enough to be negligible.
Love your channel. I to have gone to a silent compressor and your digital gage installed on a regulator with a desiccant filter next to my spray booth. You have to drain the water out of your tank after using it. Thank you for showing this I don't feel like the only one doing this.
I have one of the 2 gallon size ones for my shop, and after watching this video, I bought a second 1 gallon one since I was in the market for an air brush compressor. I had to use it today to run my air brad nailer to attach a replacement piece of corner molding in the bedroom. Got the second one for a 25% discount using a HF coupon. These are great compressors and really quiet. HF also had the digital regulator on closeout for $12.
I have been using the 2 gallon version of this compressor for over a year now. It is an amazing compressor for the price. Really quiet and the 2 gallon capacity means it is not running all the time. I highly recommend it. It is way cheaper then the airbrush compressors some companies sell. I mean really all you need is compressed air.
Have one very similar with a 9L tank. Have run it for 6+ hour painting sessions. Most of the same silent types on the market run 55-60dB. Can even spray high psi (50psi) syphon feed to push fabric paints into tshirt fabric. Keep the small as a backup.
I like my tooty for the airbrush. I have a Kolbolt that’s similar to this Fortress I use for tools ,nail gun etc…but nice to have around. Another great review!
I have the same air compressor sir it is awesome I have it in my other room and I ran a hard line from it to my build room and I hooked it into a 3 gallon air tank under the bench and the two quick disconnects one by my spray booth and one by my build air so I can blow pieces off or for whatever I may need air for their and I love it only runs a couple of minutes and I will go 2 days sometimes before it will kick on really depends on how much air I use sir. Thanks for the awesome videos and tips and the reviews that you give out sir thank you very much Jimmy Bargo
Hoy, I have the Fortress air compressor, I love it!!! I had the pancake type, worst air compressor ever, loud loud loud died in less than a year. I highly recommend the Fortress. I sure enjoy your videos.
I couldn't wait for the review, my brother used it for sometime, first one I bought had a leaky regulator but I swapped it for a 2gal.great unit from an Amazon unit.
Fantastic compressor. Here is a formula for a better cycle time adjustment for airbrushing: Adjust the cut-in/cut-out screw counter-clockwise until you have a cut-in of 50 lbs... Then, adjust the cut-out screw clockwise until it has a cut-out pressure of 100 lbs. The results... I can run a .8mm trigger style airbrush at 30 psi non-stop for 45 sec. before cut-in, and recovery is 48 seconds to cut-out at 100 lbs. (and yes I still had the trigger held down during the recovery stage). The benefit... This means that you are only running your compressor at a 50% duty ratio, and because you are not charging all the way to 135 lb. factory setting, the compressor works less, runs cooler, runs quieter, and lives much, much longer life.
I use this same compressor for my airbrushes and I love it. Those Iwata water traps are $30 at my local Hobby Lobby.. I ordered two cheaper branded ones from Spraygunner and they work great. Great tutorial.
You rock. I feel like you're living down the street... I love when a fellow Bostonian says the word "Tawny" Gold. I paint warhammer and build gunpla and tamiya motorcycles and I just watched 6 of you videos. Great videos. I started out looking for a review of zero vs gravity paint.... thanks so much for your expertise.
I bought the 2 gallon version on sale and everything else at HarborFreight including the airbrush hose, except for the regulator (Amazon). If you own an airbrush like I do, get this. Reliable, durable, and quiet. One of the best choices I made when it comes to airbrushing.
I only use quiet compressors. They’re prices are so much better than they were so there’s no reason to kill your ears anymore. I have adapters for just about every airbrush and hose to go with them. I got a bag of assorted adapters on Amazon for about $9 and it had everything I needed.
Are use the very same one. It works excellent doesn’t come on very often are usually run around 20 psi and it comes on like every 5to15 minutes depending on what I’m doing. It’s great I love it and I just use and Iwadai Neo
NOTE - there is a 2 gallon version that is quiet - however the 4 gallon one is NOT the quiet line so its very loud! - the 2 gallon version of this is the sweet spot... if you upgrade to larger size HF wont ding you but if you go down in size they ding you a 30% restocking fee! - i recommend the 2 gallon one so it doesn't come on as often
I have this compressor and don't have any complaints so far. If you can wait, they 2 gallon one goes on sale for not much more than this one ever month or so. Just keep an eye on their sales ads.
I just bought this unit today in 2 gallons size, to replace my similar Fini Advanced Quiet 2 gal compressor from Menards that died after 10 years (motor sparked ⚡️). Omg this compressor is truly as quiet as the video and it’s more than 3x as fast as my Fini! Wow! It was twice the price but money well spent! Really feels and looks well built, I love how it’s got two push-click air tool ports also. The only thing odd is it’s rated at 135 PSI but only fills to about 117 PSI according to two gauges. No big deal for me though.
I just looked it up on the Harbor Freight website. it is now (11/5/2022), $159.99 for the 1 gallon size and $189.99 for the 2 gallon size. Anyway Thank You Rex for the great review of this Harbor Freight Fortress Air Compressor. Wonderfully done as is always with your reviews.
I went to grab one of these a while back and they were sold out, then I sorta forgot about it. Buddy has one of these same units and it's great for the job intended plus other household uses. Put an spray adapter on this and clean out the vent ducts and dryer vents as well in between painting projects lol. For the price it's far better than the no name ones like you have and I do as well even though those work just fine too. Great video, now to go and see if they have one lol
Your youtube thumb for this video shows the Grex Tritium 3 so I was expecting to see you test this with it. I have that Grex and this Fortress compressor and they are both awesome products. Highly recommend both.
I currently have the same spraygunner compressor as you and if I were to upgrade to a bigger compressor, I’d buy the 2 gallon. I was thinking of getting the fortress 1 gallon, but got the tooty bc it was more simpler to set up.
I'm trying to learn about compressors for airbrushing and sprayguns. For instance; what type/brand of compressor would be good for either? Basically, I'm interested in something that can run both. I'm interested in painting metal scooter parts but also models and paintings aswell.
Robert, So I've decided I'll add an Iwata-Medea moisture trap to my system but when I search on Amazon there are two which are very similar, the F A450 and F A500. Which one is yours, assuming there is some kind of identification on the trap itself or the packaging? I'd rather get the one which is "proven" to fit with the airbrush quick connects rather than guess and risk having to return/exchange an incorrect order.
Not about this vid but I watch u test stuff out gd stuff n thanks . Remember fortress HF I used it was out game for min. I got my iwatta masters , n Avanti came across a compressor today not sure seen or not but gonna find out
Digital Regulator is from Harbor Freight. Air compressor threaded fitting size is 1/4" NPT. Airbrush threaded fitting size is 1/8" BSP. Air line quick connects are I/M style which are also available individually or in sets from Harbor Freight.
How do you make it last for almost a whole day? I had bought a 3 gallon and returned it for this since it’s quieter but even with the 3 gallon it would drain very quickly within 7 minutes
I have been waiting for this video. I’ve been wondering how quite those compressors really area. Have you tried your HPLV spray gun yet on this compressor?
What type of airhose are you using and what fittings. I'm seeing bsp fittings on most airbrushes. I have a gahlaree airbrush. I'm thinking however that the 1/4 quick connect for the compressor side should work since no threads are engaged in that connection. The only threads engaged will be on the hose itself so I'm thinking I should be OK. Any thoughts?
@@chrisw.7039 I use a Iwata hose with a fitting from Harbor Freight. The large end is a standard compressor size and the other end is 1/8 standard airbrush size
@barbatosrex9473 Thank you for the quick response. So I will just need that 1/4 quick connect end that fits into the compressor and a 1/4 coupler to join the quick connect to the airhose?
I run a moister trap on my compressor I do not run one on my airbrush hose should I use one on it even though I have one on my compressor. It is tankless which is annoying but it is pretty quit it just keeps running when I spray.
Late to party. I got mine like amost 2 years ago and man it is extremely hard to convince hobbyists to get this over "no name" compressors. You said it yourself the cost is about the same and HB constantly puts this on sale for about $110. Since its not dedicated to airbrushing you can use any common fitting from hardware stores. The moisture trap can also be picked up and usually much higher quality than the cheap inline traps. I picked up a husky trap from home depot and it was solid while costing much less. You only need the adapter to fit the airbrush hose. You see it for yourself how much faster it builds pressure and recovers with dual motor and a much lower pitch in sound. Mine doesn't raddle like yours did (prob a tag hanging) but it doesn't move and you hardly feel the vibrating. I also recommend a digital PSI gauge since the one on the tank has too large of a range. Trying to adjust for low PSI 15-35 is tough. This is meant for other airtools after all. There's also a 2 gallon version with 2 built in quick release fittings. So if you're a madman to double up the airbrush same tank, the option exists.
Standing ovation, you crushed it out of the park. Thank you very much for sharing your knowledge and reviews we are much appreciated. Looking forward to more awesome reviews. Everyone keep yourselves and love ones safe and healthy and remember to SMILE 😃 😊
18:57 It's better to drain the tank from the lever at the bottom than the emergency pin at the back. Besides depressurizing, you also want to get rid of any moisture than built up inside otherwise you could have rust problems. Also you can lock in the pressure regulator with the red ring under the knob.
To drain the water you have to open the ball valve at the bottom of the tank. The one in the back is a relief valve
I've never been overly concerned about compressor noise but then again I often wear ear defenders at my spray both, primarily to reduce the fan roar noise. I have a large very high flow rate fan on my spray booth bought many years ago in the days when solvent based paints were pretty much our only option. Once ear defenders are on then the compressor cutting in is never a huge issue. But this is a very quiet compressor, so much so that that I may well consider a "quiet" compressor when mine eventually dies as all machinery eventually does.
Beyond that it is very rare that I disagree with any of your comments and recommendations but this time I'd like to offer two rebuttals. First, buy the compressor with the largest tank that you can afford and fit into the location intended for the compressor. Most of us are not as "frugal" with air use as you so that invariably means the compressor will cycle several times during an airbrushing session - especially when drying acrylic paints as you have often demonstrated. So if the costs are similar in this case the two gallon equipped compressor is the more prudent and long lasting buy. The larger tank will ultimately mean fewer cycles on the compressor and that means a longer calendar life for the compressor. It also reduces the number of pressure cycles on the tank which further protects against fatigue failure.
Secondly, while the moisture trap/filter at the airbrush is certainly a good idea to protect the airbrush itself, I very strongly recommend fitting a moisture trap/ air dryer between the compressor and the secondary pressure regulator. All regulators but especially the finer control low flow rate air pressure regulators need clean dry air or will tend to corrode and/or easily get clogged by debris, worse yet if you have one of the lower priced ones made from mild steel which many of us do when building our first airbrush/compressor system.
Finally, when using two regulators as illustrated here the primary regulator at the compressor tank should be at least 30 psi higher than the final airbrush pressure. In this case I recommend the on-compressor regulator be set at 50 to 60 psi. That way the secondary regulator is still lowering the pressure by 30-45 psi which helps ensure its output pressure is more stable.
I got the California air compressor I got a scratch and dent floor model for$125 . I never found a scratch or dent. It super quiet and shipping was free. Drain the tank every three months. Humidity here inNO LA is usually over 90% and there is never moisture in my built in moisture trap. Good advice from someone on running the first valve at 30 psi over running pressure for me that 50 to 55. I use 55 so I can run my brush up to 30 for cleaning. Well within ab factory specs but helpful. Good job!
Good to know there are alternatives, but beyond happy with my California Air Tools. The ability to run the compressor in the garage below sleeping kids bedrooms is invaluable.
I’ve been running the 2 gal Fortress for my air brush and it rocks! I put my regulator/separator on a quick connect right off the compressor.
I recently purchased a 2 gal Fortress based on the reviews from several of the other miniature painters with TH-cam channels, and that's the way I'll be setting mine up -- the water trap on a quick disconnect from the side fitting, and the airbrush hose from that; I've got all the fittings to put a quick disconnect on each side of the water trap, so with the one on the brush I'll be able to take it all down quickly. I will soon have a spray booth to trap overspray, and then I'll be good to start practicing.
Nice. I've been using the two gal for a few years and love it. Handles the air brushes easy as well as various nailers, air blower, tire filler, etc...
This is an awesome compressor for brushing. Make sure you do the break in procedure in the manual. Run it for 30 min with the bottom port open.
Just bought this and broke it in for 30 minutes but curious what’s the point? Literally what will happen if someone never breaks it in? Won’t the same net result occur as one accumulates 30 min of runtime? I know building engines it’s important to break in the piston rings to match the block bore crosshatch but I am nor sure these air compressors are that high-precision...
@@Syclone0044some, not all. Do require a break-in period. To allow components to seat themselves properly. Now.. why this needs to be done all at once vs while you are using the tool. I agree. I do not understand the difference.
Maybe the “wearing in” of components is best done when not under load. When my wife gets frustrated with my performance I do remind her that she did not follow the marriage break in period and hence it’s understandable that i am not operating at my full potential
I run a old moisture trap that takes a roll of toilet paper which goes into a small 3-way manifold. It seriously saved on buying adaptors for all my Paasche's just to use 1 standard air hose for Paasche,Harder,Badger and a Iwata.
I use that compressor for my airbrushing. And I have a small airbrush for model railroading. Just added a water separator via a quick connect couple. Works like a charm and super quiet.
You can buy an airbrush hose with the proper adapter fitting right from Harbor Freight. Its $8 if I recall correctly. It's what I use with my 2gal Fortress compressor with zero issues. I am gonna have to check out one of those digital regulators for sure, looks handy!
i have used this compressor for about 4 or 5 years for air brushing and finish air nailer. it has preformed flawlessly. i got mine with a coupon for 90 bucks to boot.
what is your use case? do you spray all day (prime, wait, 1st coat) or just pieces? I'm only a master grade 1/100 gundam mainly so I'm concerned tank is too small, so looking at the Stealth brand, looks to be a carbon copy, same eveyrthing but with 3 gall at $199.
@@olo398 i have used it for a couple of hours a few times, and have never run out of pressure.
I bought the Hitachi version more than 2 years ago and it has worked flawlessly, Keep the great information coming. Model On!
I have the twin tank fortress. Love it. Super quiet and has 2 connection spots. Fill it and off you go.
Good call on the digital gauge. The gauge that comes with it requires you to kind of estimate the psi. It is as quiet as my Silentaire Scorpion II-TT compressor that was $349.00 and it does not have to start up as often either. Mine is 2 years old and has had ZERO issues.
Already mentioned, but draining the tank using the bottom drain is the only way to get all the water out of the tank. Pulling the pressure relief valve will leave much of the water in the tank. I am anxious to see how the Grex spray gun works with your new compressor and just works in general. As a car modeler the fan spray nozzle and larger needle are of interest and I have heard that smaller compressors can't keep up. I think your one gallon will do fine but I'd like to know before I buy. You spend it and I save it! Thanks for all you do.
The Grex mini spray and car body video will be up within a week 👍
@@barbatosrex9473 Great. Thanks for all you do.
drain the air tank from the bottom valve every time when it is not in use this will keep the moisture out of the air supply tank and will prolong the life of the compressor.
I have the 26 Gallon fortress and it will fill from empty to full in five minutes quieter than most.
The black one has a high pitched whistle that would drive me crazy.
I have the 2 gal Fortress and its run perfectly for the 3 years I have had it.
I have used mine to air brush shirts and even run a half inch air wrench to take lug nuts off my Jeep.
Very nice quality compressor.
I bought this a few weeks back for getting into airbrushing - mainly because it wasn't a single-use device and wasn't that much more expensive than tanked "dedicated" hobby compressor. It can go to a high pressure, it has a decent tank size, and for what it is, it doesn't weight much. I can fill tires with it, airbrush, take off wheels. It's amazing for $159, being a double piston design - to get this level of features in a "hobby" compressor, I was looking at $300+.
I also bought a secondary low-psi regulator for it that is by my booth. So I have 30 PSI out from the compressor running into 18 PSI at the secondary regulator to the airbrush.
So far it's been amazing. The only complaint is that the vibration it puts out on a hard floor surface may be disturbing to people in other rooms, but if you have carpeted floors, that should deaden the vibration enough to be negligible.
Love your channel. I to have gone to a silent compressor and your digital gage installed on a regulator with a desiccant filter next to my spray booth. You have to drain the water out of your tank after using it. Thank you for showing this I don't feel like the only one doing this.
I have one of the 2 gallon size ones for my shop, and after watching this video, I bought a second 1 gallon one since I was in the market for an air brush compressor. I had to use it today to run my air brad nailer to attach a replacement piece of corner molding in the bedroom. Got the second one for a 25% discount using a HF coupon. These are great compressors and really quiet. HF also had the digital regulator on closeout for $12.
I was looking for a compressor to get into airbrushing. Thanks for the review.
I have been using the 2 gallon version of this compressor for over a year now. It is an amazing compressor for the price. Really quiet and the 2 gallon capacity means it is not running all the time. I highly recommend it. It is way cheaper then the airbrush compressors some companies sell. I mean really all you need is compressed air.
Have one very similar with a 9L tank. Have run it for 6+ hour painting sessions.
Most of the same silent types on the market run 55-60dB.
Can even spray high psi (50psi) syphon feed to push fabric paints into tshirt fabric.
Keep the small as a backup.
I like my tooty for the airbrush. I have a Kolbolt that’s similar to this Fortress I use for tools ,nail gun etc…but nice to have around. Another great review!
Nice of you to test this air compressor. Thanks for sharing.
Absolutely love the Zoids Liger in the opening shot! Big Zoids fan here!
Check out the Toy Galaxy channel, he did a bio on them last night
@@barbatosrex9473 I actually watched that earlier today!
Perfect timing because I was looking at the 2 gallon version of this compressor..Thanks!
I have the same air compressor sir it is awesome I have it in my other room and I ran a hard line from it to my build room and I hooked it into a 3 gallon air tank under the bench and the two quick disconnects one by my spray booth and one by my build air so I can blow pieces off or for whatever I may need air for their and I love it only runs a couple of minutes and I will go 2 days sometimes before it will kick on really depends on how much air I use sir. Thanks for the awesome videos and tips and the reviews that you give out sir thank you very much Jimmy Bargo
I am going to add a another hook up by the 3d printers that I'm in the middle of installing them now sir
This is better than an auto show
Hoy, I have the Fortress air compressor, I love it!!! I had the pancake type, worst air compressor ever, loud loud loud died in less than a year. I highly recommend the Fortress.
I sure enjoy your videos.
Hi Barbatos Rex & it's is Randy and i like yours video is Cool & Thanks Barbatos Rex & Friends Randy
You’re going to love this compressor, I do.
I couldn't wait for the review, my brother used it for sometime, first one I bought had a leaky regulator but I swapped it for a 2gal.great unit from an Amazon unit.
Fantastic compressor. Here is a formula for a better cycle time adjustment for airbrushing: Adjust the cut-in/cut-out screw counter-clockwise until you have a cut-in of 50 lbs... Then, adjust the cut-out screw clockwise until it has a cut-out pressure of 100 lbs.
The results... I can run a .8mm trigger style airbrush at 30 psi non-stop for 45 sec. before cut-in, and recovery is 48 seconds to cut-out at 100 lbs. (and yes I still had the trigger held down during the recovery stage).
The benefit... This means that you are only running your compressor at a 50% duty ratio, and because you are not charging all the way to 135 lb. factory setting, the compressor works less, runs cooler, runs quieter, and lives much, much longer life.
I use this same compressor for my airbrushes and I love it. Those Iwata water traps are $30 at my local Hobby Lobby.. I ordered two cheaper branded ones from Spraygunner and they work great. Great tutorial.
You rock. I feel like you're living down the street... I love when a fellow Bostonian says the word "Tawny" Gold. I paint warhammer and build gunpla and tamiya motorcycles and I just watched 6 of you videos. Great videos. I started out looking for a review of zero vs gravity paint.... thanks so much for your expertise.
Thanks for the info, We will get this compressor. We look forward to watching more of your recommendations and videos
I've been eyeing the 2 gallon one for a while that way I can use it for the home and car as well.
I bought the 2 gallon version on sale and everything else at HarborFreight including the airbrush hose, except for the regulator (Amazon). If you own an airbrush like I do, get this. Reliable, durable, and quiet. One of the best choices I made when it comes to airbrushing.
Pleasantly surprised to see a Harbor Freight item that appears to be of high quality. That sounds like a good find!
I have a couple of pancake compressors in the basement, but the one I keep in my hobby room is a master blaster no name from spraygunner. Works great.
I only use quiet compressors. They’re prices are so much better than they were so there’s no reason to kill your ears anymore. I have adapters for just about every airbrush and hose to go with them. I got a bag of assorted adapters on Amazon for about $9 and it had everything I needed.
you can drain it on the front bottom turn valve there if you look...the back valve is for safety the bottom front valve is for draining
Are use the very same one. It works excellent doesn’t come on very often are usually run around 20 psi and it comes on like every 5to15 minutes depending on what I’m doing. It’s great I love it and I just use and Iwadai Neo
I’m excited to see more about the gloss clear
I’ve been looking for a new compressor so thank you for the reviews
I like how you give options for other quiet compressors. I use the Cal-Air one and love it.
Now I'm all excited for the 2K video!
Thanks brother painter,,, I know now I can use a regular compressor for my airbrush and how too,,,,
NOTE - there is a 2 gallon version that is quiet - however the 4 gallon one is NOT the quiet line so its very loud! - the 2 gallon version of this is the sweet spot... if you upgrade to larger size HF wont ding you but if you go down in size they ding you a 30% restocking fee! - i recommend the 2 gallon one so it doesn't come on as often
Picked one up today with a $40 off deal. But I'm struggling with finding the 1/4 adapter to quick connect. Any suggestions?
I got one on Amazon, do a search there, they have a bunch to choose from
@@barbatosrex9473 Thanks. I got it sorted out!
I have this compressor and don't have any complaints so far. If you can wait, they 2 gallon one goes on sale for not much more than this one ever month or so. Just keep an eye on their sales ads.
yep. I just picked up the 2 gal Fortress for $175 today on sale. I will use with the Iwata hp-c plus and a 1980’s Paasch single action siphon
I just bought this unit today in 2 gallons size, to replace my similar Fini Advanced Quiet 2 gal compressor from Menards that died after 10 years (motor sparked ⚡️). Omg this compressor is truly as quiet as the video and it’s more than 3x as fast as my Fini! Wow! It was twice the price but money well spent! Really feels and looks well built, I love how it’s got two push-click air tool ports also. The only thing odd is it’s rated at 135 PSI but only fills to about 117 PSI according to two gauges. No big deal for me though.
This is a great air compressor for sure
I don't know if this compressor is eu only, but would definitely recommend the Stanley FATMAX Silent Air Compressor DST 101/8/6SI
I just looked it up on the Harbor Freight website. it is now (11/5/2022), $159.99 for the 1 gallon size and $189.99 for the 2 gallon size. Anyway Thank You Rex for the great review of this Harbor Freight Fortress Air Compressor. Wonderfully done as is always with your reviews.
Check the site weekly they go on sale constantly. Another viewer told my they got one recently for close to $100
@@barbatosrex9473 Gee, and WOW! - That was fast. I hadn't even finished watching this video before you replied back. Thank You For your kind reply.
Ya.. just bought this compressor and was wondering if it would be ok for hobby airbrushing.
Absolutely, that's all I use it for
@@barbatosrex9473 Super .. thanks
This would be a good replacement for my old one, great video as always.
I went to grab one of these a while back and they were sold out, then I sorta forgot about it. Buddy has one of these same units and it's great for the job intended plus other household uses. Put an spray adapter on this and clean out the vent ducts and dryer vents as well in between painting projects lol. For the price it's far better than the no name ones like you have and I do as well even though those work just fine too. Great video, now to go and see if they have one lol
I got the 2 gallon version and love it.
Great piece of equipment for sure
Great video, thank you . I enjoy them
Can we get the link to the red hose and the swivel attachment please?
I got the ultra quiet 2 gallon I love it
That moisture trap came with mine.
I'm debating between the 2 gallon version and the No Name Super Tooty that SprayGunner sells
hey barbatos i was wondering if you could recommend what brand or type of quick release to buy for your Swallowtail airbrush
This one here works great amzn.to/4aGu1xy
Your youtube thumb for this video shows the Grex Tritium 3 so I was expecting to see you test this with it. I have that Grex and this Fortress compressor and they are both awesome products. Highly recommend both.
I noticed in a newer video you took the digital air compressor gauge off what is it a bad product or did you just switch to something else?
Harbor Freight is running a 10% off deal this weekend.
I currently have the same spraygunner compressor as you and if I were to upgrade to a bigger compressor, I’d buy the 2 gallon. I was thinking of getting the fortress 1 gallon, but got the tooty bc it was more simpler to set up.
What Adapters do you use to go from the normal 1/4 air hose to the air brush hose
1/4 to 1/8
I got a 4710SQ from California air it's super quiet and the build quality is awesome I love it. Plus it's a 1hp motor. You should check it out
Did you break in the compressor as the manual says too?
I'm trying to learn about compressors for airbrushing and sprayguns. For instance; what type/brand of compressor would be good for either? Basically, I'm interested in something that can run both. I'm interested in painting metal scooter parts but also models and paintings aswell.
Spray guns require a full sized industrial compressor. However you can power an airbrush with that, I've done a video on it
Have you tried the paasche TG-3AS
Is that the Talon? I haven't but plan to test one. It's in my cart just haven't clicked the purchase button
@@barbatosrex9473 yes sir that's it
You can open the drain on bottom to empty it.
How accurate do you think that digital gauge is?
Robert, So I've decided I'll add an Iwata-Medea moisture trap to my system but when I search on Amazon there are two which are very similar, the F A450 and F A500. Which one is yours, assuming there is some kind of identification on the trap itself or the packaging? I'd rather get the one which is "proven" to fit with the airbrush quick connects rather than guess and risk having to return/exchange an incorrect order.
You are doing gods work!
Whenever I need great advice, you're hear for me. Thanks for all you do Barbatos Rex. 🔥❤ 🔥
You're welcome buddy
I use a California Air Tools 2010a.
how is it? what is your use case? looking at that, might just go big tank since dbs are all similar/same....hmmm
@@olo398 Its sitting in my room and use it constantly when painting, and its not annoying like those little hobby air compressor.
Not about this vid but I watch u test stuff out gd stuff n thanks . Remember fortress HF I used it was out game for min. I got my iwatta masters , n Avanti came across a compressor today not sure seen or not but gonna find out
Can't leave pics.
I think you should have gotten the 2gal I have 2 of them and they are the best for the money and I do lots of airbrushing
where did you get your digital pressure gauge and what size are the connections? I am very new at this and don't have any experience yet/
Digital Regulator is from Harbor Freight. Air compressor threaded fitting size is 1/4" NPT. Airbrush threaded fitting size is 1/8" BSP. Air line quick connects are I/M style which are also available individually or in sets from Harbor Freight.
You didn’t have to break in the compressor?
How do you make it last for almost a whole day? I had bought a 3 gallon and returned it for this since it’s quieter but even with the 3 gallon it would drain very quickly within 7 minutes
I have been waiting for this video. I’ve been wondering how quite those compressors really area. Have you tried your HPLV spray gun yet on this compressor?
What type of airhose are you using and what fittings. I'm seeing bsp fittings on most airbrushes. I have a gahlaree airbrush. I'm thinking however that the 1/4 quick connect for the compressor side should work since no threads are engaged in that connection. The only threads engaged will be on the hose itself so I'm thinking I should be OK. Any thoughts?
@@chrisw.7039 I use a Iwata hose with a fitting from Harbor Freight. The large end is a standard compressor size and the other end is 1/8 standard airbrush size
@barbatosrex9473 Thank you for the quick response. So I will just need that 1/4 quick connect end that fits into the compressor and a 1/4 coupler to join the quick connect to the airhose?
I’m stuck between this one and the Cool Tooty. Final thoughts?
If your just going to airbrush with it I'd go with the Tooty. If anything more than that go with this one
@@barbatosrex9473 Thanks!
I use a regular gallon air compressor but honestly it’s loud as hell!
I’m thinking of picking this exact one up, would I also need to get everything else like the separate air pressure gauge and the other hose?
I run a moister trap on my compressor I do not run one on my airbrush hose should I use one on it even though I have one on my compressor. It is tankless which is annoying but it is pretty quit it just keeps running when I spray.
Could you attach a water trap at the compressor? Or is the angle restrictive?
I have mine attached to my bench then I just ran the hose from the compressor to it
So, with the tank and all those add ons... what was the final cost for this?
Is there any reason not to trust the onboard compressor regulator?
I'M LOOKING FOR A AIR COMPRESSOR, SO THIS SHALL BE THE BRAND I,LL GET!
Late to party. I got mine like amost 2 years ago and man it is extremely hard to convince hobbyists to get this over "no name" compressors. You said it yourself the cost is about the same and HB constantly puts this on sale for about $110. Since its not dedicated to airbrushing you can use any common fitting from hardware stores. The moisture trap can also be picked up and usually much higher quality than the cheap inline traps. I picked up a husky trap from home depot and it was solid while costing much less. You only need the adapter to fit the airbrush hose. You see it for yourself how much faster it builds pressure and recovers with dual motor and a much lower pitch in sound. Mine doesn't raddle like yours did (prob a tag hanging) but it doesn't move and you hardly feel the vibrating. I also recommend a digital PSI gauge since the one on the tank has too large of a range. Trying to adjust for low PSI 15-35 is tough. This is meant for other airtools after all. There's also a 2 gallon version with 2 built in quick release fittings. So if you're a madman to double up the airbrush same tank, the option exists.
I would love too know where you get them airbrush stands from buddy
My compressor is acting up after a year of use. I plan on getting one of those to replace it when the time comes.
Standing ovation, you crushed it out of the park. Thank you very much for sharing your knowledge and reviews we are much appreciated. Looking forward to more awesome reviews. Everyone keep yourselves and love ones safe and healthy and remember to SMILE 😃 😊
Do you still use this and do you see any drop in pressure spraying while it's filling back up?
I love my Tooty from Spray Gunner! so far but something with a bigger tank would come in Handy some days ;)