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Electric Air Compressors for Shops and Service Bays
Two-Stage Power for Continuous-Duty Tool Use
An electric air compressor runs quieter, cleaner, and with less maintenance than a gas unit, which is why it belongs inside a shop, service bay, or fabrication floor with power available. Mi-T-M's stationary line uses two-stage cast-iron pumps that compress air twice for higher pressure, up to 175 PSI, and cooler running than a single-stage unit. That headroom is what keeps impact wrenches, sanders, and spray equipment fed through a full shift without the pump falling behind demand.
Match Voltage and Phase to Your Shop
These compressors are wired for a specific voltage and phase, so the incoming service decides the model. Single-phase 230V suits smaller shops on standard service; three-phase 208V, 230V, and 460V suit larger facilities with three-phase power and run more efficiently at higher horsepower. The 15 HP models are three-phase only. Confirm your panel before ordering. For safe installation and operation of a pressurized system, follow the OSHA compressed-gas equipment guidance.
Tank Size, Orientation, and Configuration
An 80-gallon tank stores enough reserve for most single-operator bays; a 120-gallon tank suits higher demand or several tools at once. Vertical models save floor space; horizontal models sit low and stable. Duplex units run two pumps on one tank for output and redundancy. Related: Air Compressors · 120-Gallon Air Compressors · Vertical Air Compressors. A common single-phase choice is the ACS-23175 7.5 HP 80-gallon compressor.