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Campbell Hausfeld 1 Gallon Air Compressor
— Campbell Hausfeld FP2028 —
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For the best deal on the Campbell Hausfeld 1 Gallon Air Compressor, you'll want to compare prices before you buy. Our list of stores carrying the FP2028 (located below) tracks merchants who often have bargain prices and great sales. In addition, we provide a price graph for every item, showing its high and low price history over the last three months. This lets you quickly spot price trends, so you can get the best possible deal. StreetPrices was the first site on the web to offer price graphs.
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Prices based on ground shipping (change)
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Campbell Hausfeld FP2028
lowest base price, without shipping and tax
We found 2 listings for the Campbell Hausfeld 1 Gallon Air Compressor (Campbell Hausfeld FP2028):
Articles and Reviews
Reviews by Users
11 May 2009



Just what I needed
Sure, not a real heavy-duty piece of equipment, but perfect to carry to job sites when I need to make a repair or on-site installation. Most of my work (custom window treatments) is done in my workroom with a higher capacity compressor, but this little guy is great backup. If I need to take it to a client's house, it does the job. It is a respected, recognizable brand, helping to reassure the client of competence....
–L. Attigfrom Amazon.com
17 Apr 2009



Good for small jobs
This is a good small compressor. I bought it for infrequent use and believe it will be just fine for the occasional flat tire, brad nail project, etc. It has worked well so far, but big forewarned, this little compressor is very loud. The Amazon seller provided excellent, fast service and product arrived in good working order.
–R. Doldfrom Amazon.com
13 Apr 2009



Very low quality. Very loud.
I bought this air compressor to use for airbrushing. I need 20-40 psi and less than 1 cfm. This compressor will generate 100 psi. Here is the funny part... the instruction sheet says for break-in you should turn the regulator valve clockwise all the way and leave it open (no hose, etc) and run for 5 minutes before using. Fair enough. No regulator... no valve... the think runs 100 psi and just splills that out into what ever you hook up to it. You would have to add a regulator to it. The ...
–Jay D. Andersonfrom Amazon.com