Reddit mentions: The best air compressor replacement parts

We found 24 Reddit comments discussing the best air compressor replacement parts. We ran sentiment analysis on each of these comments to determine how redditors feel about different products. We found 3 products and ranked them based on the amount of positive reactions they received. Here are the top 20.

🎓 Reddit experts on air compressor replacement parts

The comments and opinions expressed on this page are written exclusively by redditors. To provide you with the most relevant data, we sourced opinions from the most knowledgeable Reddit users based the total number of upvotes and downvotes received across comments on subreddits where air compressor replacement parts are discussed. For your reference and for the sake of transparency, here are the specialists whose opinions mattered the most in our ranking.
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Top Reddit comments about Air Compressor Replacement Parts:

u/invitrobrew · 4 pointsr/Homebrewing

I bought the SS carb caps after my plastic one cracked and started leaking: https://www.amazon.com/Stainless-Carbonation-Barb-Drink-Bottles/dp/B00V334SME

Haven't had any issues, they work great for me. They're also awesome because they fit both gas and liquid QDs. So I also use them to flush my lines after a keg kicks.

u/giltwist · 2 pointsr/LifeProTips

Second this! It's actually really easy to make at home. Forget about that overpriced landfill-saturating Soda Stream. Go to your local gas dispensary, get a 5lb or 20lb tank of "food grade" CO2, a regulator, some tubing, and a carbonator cap. It's crazy easy, and you end up saving big in the long run. Pennies per gallon instead of dollars per pint. My regulator caps out about 45PSI. I'd recommend maybe 60PSI given my results.

u/KickMeElmo · 2 pointsr/EatCheapAndHealthy

Quick and simple guide: http://www.popsci.com/diy/article/2012-06/how-make-your-own-home-carbonation-system

Carbonation cap: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00V334SME/

Hose and quick disconnect: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0064OI77Y/

Pressure regulator: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B002UZUJ22/

For the tank, contact a local welding shop and ask them to price a pure CO2 cylinder. Tell them what it's for if they ask about grade. Make sure you find out cylinder cost as well as refill cost. I could have gotten a cheaper cylinder on Amazon apparently, but I didn't overpay by much. Mine's a 20 pound, but you can get 5 and 10 as well.

u/ImpressiveJerky · 1 pointr/firewater

I don't know if you have a craft brew set up or not, but a bottle of co2 and a carbonation cap like this will let you mix up, oxygen purge and keep, essentially for ever.

u/BretBeermann · 2 pointsr/Homebrewing

Just need any bottle, any regulator to fit that bottle, beer tubing, a soda keg disconnect, and something called a "carbonator cap". The stainless ones can be found on amazon.

https://www.amazon.com/Stainless-Carbonation-Barb-Drink-Bottles/dp/B00V334SME/ref=sr_1_4?ie=UTF8&qid=1482679787&sr=8-4&keywords=carbonation+cap

u/skitzo2000 · 2 pointsr/Homebrewing

I bought one of these https://www.amazon.com/Stainless-Carbonation-Barb-Drink-Bottles/dp/B00V334SME

I just have to disconnect one of my other gas post ball locks from a different keg and I'm good to go.

u/chino_brews · 2 pointsr/Homebrewing

Probably not that one. Get one that says it works for both liquid and gas posts like this one. Some do. Some don't. Dual use post allows you to use the bottle for cleaning and maybe it has other uses.

Edit: changed link to the better carb cap that I bought, which includes a barb on underside.

u/yummybluewaffle_NA · 5 pointsr/Homebrewing

That gave me a great idea! What if I bought all 5 of these items and rigged them up in order onto a 12 oz soda bottle:

u/ace915 · 1 pointr/Homebrewing

I like this version of the carb cap. The barb on the underside let’s you connect tubing for a few extra uses: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00V334SME/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_i_rrkACb3FQHYP7

u/Gonzchris1119 · 3 pointsr/Homebrewing

Do you struggle to finish an entire growler? I'm trying to understand how 4 pints of beer is hard for a group of people to finish. Getting past that point. What are you trying to accomplish by having a pressurized growler? Prevent oxidation?

There are carbonation caps which you can do almost what you want. Although I'd use a 2 liter soda bottle and put a pickup tube that goes down to the bottom.
https://www.amazon.com/Happybrew-325-Stainless-Carbonation-Bottles/dp/B00V334SME

u/Ottonym · 1 pointr/lulzbot

It may be overkill, but using rubber dampener mounts can isolate vibrations.

Here's one for an air compressor: https://www.amazon.com/Compressor-Rubber-Feet-Mount-Vibration/dp/B076PBYPP1/

There are some other ones I found as well - just search for "Rubber Dampener Mount" and you'll get lots of ideas.

u/raserei0408 · 1 pointr/Homebrewing

It's not classy, but I like to use a 2L soda bottle, filled through a carbonation cap with a tube to minimize CO2 loss. Cheap and effective, if sketchy-looking.

u/EngineeredMadness · 1 pointr/Homebrewing

Yeah, put the regulator on low to fill the balloon. I used one of these things to fill it, have ball lock QD attached to regulator, but many configurations are valid. I think I've seen the barb-qds cheaper on Ebay

u/Evilsmurfkiller · 1 pointr/Homebrewing

I have this hooked up to a submersion pump (Mark II keg/carboy washer). I just hook the ball lock to it, slip a half inch silicone hose over the tap and lay it in the basin to recirculate.

u/gibolas · 1 pointr/Homebrewing

I use the stainless carb cap with a barb on it https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00V334SME/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_awdb_.jT8ybMVS3DKG


I put a piece of vinyl tubing on the carb cap barb and stick that inside 1/2" silicon tubing as an a reducer of sorts. The pump has a barb that fits 1/2" tubing.

u/Barrel_Aged · 3 pointsr/cocktails

My setup is something like this:

  • 5lb CO2 tank, about $40-50.
  • Regulator, about $50
  • Gas line w/ ball lock valve, about $10
  • Stainless steel carbonator caps, about $12 each

    Homebrew shops generally carry the tanks, and can fill them for you. You're probably looking at $120-$150 initial cost, but your cost per carbonation is pretty close zero: just the cost to refill the tank.

    With this setup, you carbonate directly in plastic soda bottles. I generally use seltzer bottles, since they don't have any residual flavors in them, and they're designed to hold the pressure.

    Transfer whatever you want to carbonate into a plastic bottle (about 3/4 full). Get it as cold as possible: for sodas, that's as close to 32-F as you can get; for cocktails, it's maybe 20 to 25-F. Squeeze the excess air out, screw on the carbonator cap, attach the gas hose, and shake the hell out of the bottle. Release the pressure (carefully; some mixtures can foam a lot), and repeat once or twice if you want really strong carbonation. For water, I usually carbonate around 35 psi. For cocktails, closer to 45 psi.

    To bottle cocktails or sodas once they're carbonated, you can use 187ml champagne bottles and an inexpensive bottle capper. Your local homebrew shop probably carries both.
u/Throwaway_4_opinions · 2 pointsr/VXJunkies

One of these should get the job done. No use reinventing the wheel here. GOCHANGE 140PSI 1/4 Inch Air Pressure Regulator Relief with Gauge Hose Quick Release Compressor Fitting https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01EFUTTU2/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_ZXZGzb22CXSKZ

u/tgjer · 16 pointsr/BuyItForLife

Don't even need the soda stream - get a carbonation cap, a Co2 regulator, a ball lock gas coupler, and some 5/16" tubing. Also probably get some tubing clamps from the hardware store to help keep everything together.

With that setup, you can carbonate anything you want in a regular plastic soda bottle. Screw on the cap, snap the coupler to it, and pressurize it directly from the Co2 tank. You don't even need to limit yourself to carbonating liquids. Cut up little pieces of fruit so they fit into the soda bottle and you can carbonate them too.

Also, if you're buying a Co2 tank, don't get a new one. Look on Craigslist, old welding tanks are fine. When you take a tank to be "refilled" at a welding shop (or even a homebrew shop), you don't get the same tank back. They just swap it out for a full one. So if you bought a shiny new one, that's just a waste of money.

u/R__Daneel_Olivaw · 7 pointsr/financialindependence

Not sure if you're looking for extra frugality, but you can make your own SodaStream for cheap. Only problem is that it's ugly as sin. That said, you can also buy a paintball co2 canister and an adapter and hook that up to your SodaStream to replace the stupid expensive little cartridges.

EDIT: Found the instructions to do it, don't remember where they're from though.


Don't even need the soda stream - get a carbonation cap, a Co2 regulator, a ball lock gas coupler, and some 5/16" tubing. Also probably get some tubing clamps from the hardware store to help keep everything together.

With that setup, you can carbonate anything you want in a regular plastic soda bottle. Screw on the cap, snap the coupler to it, and pressurize it directly from the Co2 tank. You don't even need to limit yourself to carbonating liquids. Cut up little pieces of fruit so they fit into the soda bottle and you can carbonate them too.

Also, if you're buying a Co2 tank, don't get a new one. Look on Craigslist, old welding tanks are fine. When you take a tank to be "refilled" at a welding shop (or even a homebrew shop), you don't get the same tank back. They just swap it out for a full one. So if you bought a shiny new one, that's just a waste of money.