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This is a quality hose. I have only had it for 2 months so check back for an update
This was a great buy but I'll know more about it after we get into the depths of winter and the cold Nebraska temps. This hose appears to be pliable enough at this time to be workable in the cold temps though.
I'm not disappointed. I had bought an air hose at a local (mega) hardware store and it not only looked cheap but felt like rigid plastic. I saw this hose on Amazon.com and since my compressor was Porter Cable as well, figured I'd return the other and purchase this one (actually $5 cheaper even with shipping). It's made of a softer rubber, feels heavy duty, and comes with the Porter Cable name. What more could I ask for.
And makes the flooring staple gun down on the floor all the time and leaves a mark on the wood floor. Bottom line is it's working, but I have to make the coil shaped hose straight all the time. The rolled hose catches air guns and other stuffs on the floor. It's even worse on cold temperature. Porter-Cable needs to make it more flexible.
Shipping speed from order to delivery was reasonable, less than two weeks. rubber hose with decent flexability, nice brass fittings and ferrules BUT it's missing the black strain reliefs as shown in the above Amazon picture, I guess somebody at P/C read their accountant's memo. Sung to the theme song from Mister Ed:"A hose is a hose, it sucks it blows".Actually this is a well made (and made in America for a change even as P/C makes more and more of their items overseas - hello [local store]). It's a good buy at a good price, but it's a "teaser" with the free shipping as you'll have to find something else to tip the [money amount]scale and Amazon has discontinued many of the small inexpensive things - such as Milton Kwik-Change couplers and plugs. Should hold up as well as the equivalent grade Goodyear hose. Who knows, perhaps even made by them. Clever. So buy yourself a good book on constuction techniques along with it, or better yet a good book on jokes so the next time somebody uses a nailgun to sink a 16d nail into their foot on the jobsite you'll have something clever to say to lighten up the situation besides "Did you square that shoe before nailing".
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