The thing to remember about these systems is that the are strict
pressure multipliers. So if you get double the pressure out the back
side, you have to put (a little more than) twice the volume in the
front side. If your onboard compressor is a small piston type, it
will have to work a long time to get the job done. These were
designed as someone else mentioned to be used on nitrogen bottles when
they are getting low on pressure. There is still a lot of gas left in
them, but not enough pressure to do the job at hand. But the systems
I have seen in the past were larger shop tools, not suitable for
vehicle installation. They were also much cheaper.
On Sun, Jul 19, 2009 at 11:59 PM, Randall<tr3driver@ca.rr.com> wrote:
>> Anyone know how a system like this can work?
>>
>> http://www.dickmantires.com/air_pressure/air_pressure.html
>
> The details say "The pressure increase is attained using mechanical
> advantage inside the booster."
>
> That makes me think it's a pump & compressor of some sort, like perhaps a
> 1.4" diameter piston driving a 1" diameter piston. For example,
> http://tinyurl.com/ktxzca
>
> Randall
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