Offering users an incredible mixture or extreme reliability, greater efficiency, and more power than ever before, the Ingersoll Rand Type 30 air compressor sets new standards in the market, and is the ideal choice for the most demanding industrial applications that you can imagine.  Thanks to a robust construction that takes into account almost a hundred years of producing high quality air powered tools, and is built for the most rigorous work possible, this heavyweight compressor is designed to give the highest possible levels of service that modern industry demands.

The Ingersoll Rand Type 30 air compressor is 100% duty rated.  This means it is designed to run 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, and 52 weeks a year.  Its motor is high power and low maintenance, making a very reliable system for your needs.  The advantage of a system that can run so hard is that it means less downtime for your staff.  If you operate 24 hours a day, you need to be able to keep your staff working at the same rate all the time.  With the Type 30, shift handovers do not need to mean down time, and you can keep processes running all the time.

The Ingersoll Rand Type 30 air compressor has been designed with reliability in mind from the outset.  All aspects of the unit have been optimized for use so that when you start it running, you can be confident that it will keep going and not let you down.  Ingersoll Rand are one of the longest established manufacturers of air compressors and air powered tools, and they have brought all of their experience to bear on their latest models such as the Ingersoll Rand Type 30 air compressor.  Innovations that have been developed over the years have been incorporated into the manufacture of the unit, and as soon as you switch it on, you begin to take advantage of them.

One of the most remarkable things about the design of the Ingersoll Rand Type 30 air compressor is that it completely does away with a traditional oil pump.  Investigations showed that the oil pump was the area of the air compressor that was most likely to fail, and this would compromise the reliability of the units.  In order to avoid needing a pump, for the Ingersoll Rand Type 30 air compressor, the company designed a special splash lubrication system, that replaces the traditional oil pump, and which translates the actual energy of the r