Well it is Friday so I'll respond. Filling all 4 at once being faster is IMHO bunk. You need a certain volume of air to raise pressure to"X" from"Y" and the compressor provides a certain CFM at a specified pressure. Most compressors cycle off at approximately 100 to 110 psi so how could running it against 40 or so PSI be harmful unless you run it for hours on end. Oh and don't even think of blaming the poor little Schrader Valve, you know the $0.75 cent piece that supports our gazillion dollar rigs. All of this said in a non confrontational way of course. My friend also wants to know if the back pressure theorists think the world is flat.
To some degree you make a good point, but all of the action of filling up 4 tires isn't just in air moving from compressor to tires. There is connecting hoses, moving hoses, checking pressure. All of that stuff is simplified by doing 4 tires at once.
On the air moving front, I don't know for sure that the Schrader valve is the limiting factor of air movement in the system, but it seems a likely culprit. So pushing air against 4 valves at once vs only 1 at a time would allow more air to pass over time. Of course, I'll argue against myself here, and the counterpoint being that my previous statement would be true if the compressor provided a fixed pressure (like a regulated supply on a tanked compressor), but since the compressors we are talking about are generally providing unregulated air, the pressure will increase, therefore increasing the flow through the valve. So it may all be moot.
As a data point, I can drop drop air from my tires faster than I can put in with my 4-flator set up and a Viair 400c. 5psi/min drop and 1.8psi/min increase, so doesn't seem like the Schrader valve is limiting my setup, but that is with 4 valves. I'd have to test to see what pumping up one tire looked like with my compressor.
Last thought, my compressor is rated differently at different working pressures. I may be misinterpreting this, but if I'm running unregulated air supply from my compressor against one Schrader valve, I would assume that the system between the compressor and the Schrader valve would be greater than the 20-40psi in the tire until it equalized after the compressor shut off. I don't have any real world measurements to verify this though. If it is true though, then pushing against 4 valves instead of 1 would cause my working pressure to be lower, therefore my CFM would be greater and the work my compressor was doing would be lower.
PSI | CFM | A | BAR | LPM | A |
---|
12-VOLT COMPRESSOR | | | | | |
---|
0 | 2.62 | 16 | 0 | 74.0 | 16 |
10 | 2.39 | 18 | 1.0 | 65.0 | 20 |
20 | 2.21 | 20 | 2.0 | 60.0 | 23 |
30 | 2.11 | 22 | 3.0 | 56.0 | 25 |
40 | 2.01 | 24 | 4.0 | 53.0 | 27 |
50 | 1.93 | 25 | 5.0 | 49.0 | 28 |
60 | 1.84 | 26 | 6.0 | 46.0 | 28 |
70 | 1.73 | 27 | 7.0 | 42.0 | 28 |
80 | 1.65 | 27 | 8.0 | 38.0 | 28 |
90 | 1.52 | 27 | 9.0 | 35.0 | 27 |
100 | 1.45 | 27 | 10.0 | 31.0 | 27 |
110 | 1.35 | 27 | | | |
120 | 1.26 | 27 | | | |
130 | 1.19 | 27 | | | |
140 | 1.08 | 27 | | | |
150 | 1.01 | 26 | | | |
All of the air flow talk is fairly academic in my mind. The biggest bonus of doing 4 tires at once is how much less cumbersome it is than to move around the truck and fill each tire. It takes me less than a minute to get the hoses connected, then all I have to do is turn it on and wait 10-12 min and I'm done. Another 1-2 min to wrap everything up and put it away.