Get free shipping on your order, with any water filter subscription. Find my filter

Open Hamburger Menu
Sears Parts Direct
Tips to find your model number
Coleman L0502710 air compressor

Coleman L0502710 air compressor Parts

Here are the diagrams and repair parts for Coleman L0502710 air compressor, as well as links to manuals and error code tables, if available.

By Schematic
SELECT DIAGRAM
?

This is the number corresponding to the part on the diagram / schematic

Browse Parts for L0502710 Power Tools

  • Bolt, Shoulder (3) for Coleman L0502710 - Part 059-0221

    Tank/pump/motor diagram

    Bolt, Shoulder (3)

    Part #059-0221

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Wheel (2) for Coleman L0502710 - Part 095-0014

    Tank/pump/motor diagram

    Wheel (2)

    Part #095-0014

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Power Cord for Coleman L0502710 - Part 026-0030

    Tank/pump/motor diagram

    Power Cord

    Part #026-0030

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Regulator for Coleman L0502710 - Part 105-0004

    Regulator

    Part #105-0004

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • On/off Switc for Coleman L0502710 - Part 034-0135

    On/off Switc

    Part #034-0135

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Screw for Coleman L0502710 - Part 061-0121

    Manifold/gauge/pressure switch diagram

    Screw

    Part #061-0121

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Bleeder Tube for Coleman L0502710 - Part 145-0324

    Bleeder Tube

    Part #145-0324

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Tank Assembly, 15 Gallon Includes 9a-9f for Coleman L0502710 - Part 153-0206

    Tank/pump/motor diagram

    Tank Assembly, 15 Gallon Includes 9a-9f

    Part #153-0206

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Trans Tube for Coleman L0502710 - Part 145-0327

    Tank/pump/motor diagram

    Trans Tube

    Part #145-0327

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Knob for Coleman L0502710 - Part 137-0001

    Knob

    Part #137-0001

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

Coleman Air Compressor L0502710 FAQs

The XC602100 is a Campbell Hausfeld stationary electric air compressor model (not a Coleman model). It is commonly described as a 60-gallon, 2-stage, oil-lubricated compressor designed for higher-demand shop use, with a cast-iron pump and higher maximum tank pressure than many portable units.

How this relates to your Coleman L0502710

Because this page is for the Coleman L0502710 air compressor, XC602100 is a different brand and model number. When ordering parts or troubleshooting, always match the exact model number on your compressor’s data plate to avoid getting the wrong pressure switch, regulator, or check valve.

  • Confirm the model number is L0502710 (Coleman) versus XC602100 (Campbell Hausfeld)
  • Match electrical requirements (voltage, phase, amperage) before replacing motor or switch components
  • Match pressure ratings when replacing a pressure switch or safety valve
  • Match fitting sizes and thread types for gauges, regulators, and check valves
Quick comparison
Item Coleman L0502710 Campbell Hausfeld XC602100
Brand Coleman Campbell Hausfeld
Model number L0502710 XC602100
Typical use General compressed-air tasks (varies by configuration) Stationary, higher-demand shop use
Pump type Varies by configuration Commonly described as 2-stage, oil-lubricated
Why it matters

Air compressor parts are not universal. Using the wrong model when selecting parts can lead to incorrect cut-in/cut-out pressure settings, air leaks, poor tank fill performance, or motor overload. For repair help by symptom, we use the same troubleshooting flow regardless of brand.

Helpful DIY troubleshooting

For parts lookup beyond what is listed for this model, search by model number on Sears PartsDirect.

Last updated: February 2026

There is no single “largest 10-amp compressor” because 10A is an electrical limit, not a size rating. In practice, the largest 10A units are typically portable compressors that stay under a 120V, 10A circuit while maximizing tank size and air delivery (CFM/LPM). For model-specific parts help on your Coleman L0502710, use the parts lookup on Sears PartsDirect.

What “largest” should mean for a 10A compressor

When you compare 10A compressors, we recommend focusing on performance specs that actually describe capacity:

  • Air delivery: CFM at 90 PSI (or LPM) for tool use
  • Tank size: gallons or liters for run time and cycling
  • Max pressure: PSI (often 125 to 150 PSI on many portables)
  • Duty cycle: how long it can run before cooling
  • Pump type: oil-free (lower maintenance) vs oil-lubricated (often quieter, longer-lived)
Typical ranges you will see at 10 amps (120V)

Most 120V compressors that truly stay near a 10A draw land in these common ranges:

Spec Typical 10A portable range What it affects
Tank size 1 to 6 gallons Run time before the motor cycles
Air delivery ~1.0 to 3.0 CFM @ 90 PSI Whether it can keep up with air tools
Max pressure ~120 to 150 PSI Stored air capacity and tool compatibility
Quick way to pick the “largest” 10A option for your needs

Use this checklist to match the compressor to the job:

  • Brad nailers, inflators: prioritize portability; small tank is fine
  • Finish nailers, light staplers: mid-size tank helps reduce cycling
  • Impact wrench, die grinder, DA sander: prioritize higher CFM; many 10A units will struggle
  • Frequent use: choose a better duty cycle and cooling design
Why it matters

A compressor can be “large” by tank size but still feel weak if CFM is low. For real-world tool performance, CFM at your working PSI matters more than amps alone. If your compressor will not start, will not build pressure, or leaks air, our DIY guides can help you pinpoint the limiting component.

Related DIY help

Last updated: February 2026

You cannot “turn up” CFM on a Coleman L0502710 air compressor beyond what the pump and motor are built to deliver; CFM is mainly limited by motor horsepower, pump displacement, and RPM. You can, however, maximize the usable airflow by reducing restrictions, fixing leaks, and matching pressure settings to the tool.

What actually increases usable CFM
  • Lower the regulated outlet pressure to the minimum your tool needs; many tools consume less air at lower pressure, and the compressor cycles less aggressively.
  • Use larger, shorter air hose (for example, 3/8-inch ID instead of 1/4-inch) to reduce pressure drop.
  • Remove restrictions: clogged intake filter, kinked hose, undersized quick-connects, or a dirty regulator.
  • Fix air leaks at fittings, drain valve, tank check valve, and couplers.
  • Add storage, not CFM: a larger auxiliary tank increases run time before pressure drops, but it does not increase the compressor’s true CFM.
Quick checks that often make the biggest difference
  1. Set the regulator just above the tool requirement (common shop tools are 70 to 90 PSI).
  2. Listen for hissing; soap-test fittings to find small leaks.
  3. Drain tank moisture; water reduces effective tank volume and can cause corrosion.
  4. Confirm the compressor reaches normal cut-out pressure and restarts cleanly.
Options comparison
Goal What to do What it changes
More airflow at the tool Bigger/shorter hose, better fittings Reduces pressure drop (feels like more CFM)
Longer tool run time Add an auxiliary tank More stored air, same CFM
True higher CFM Larger compressor (more HP/pump) Increases actual delivered CFM
Why it matters

Running a compressor at higher pressure than needed increases heat, noise, and cycling, and it can make air-hungry tools feel “starved” even when the compressor is working normally.

Related troubleshooting and repair help

If the compressor seems weak or slow to recover, use these guides to pinpoint the cause:

For model-based parts lookup and ordering, start with the parts list for Coleman L0502710, or search by model on Sears PartsDirect.

Last updated: February 2026

Most common symptoms to help you fix your air compressors

Choose a symptom to see related air compressor repairs.

Main causes: lack of electrical power, check valve failure, bad pressure switch…

Main causes: tank drain valve open or leaking air, leaky air tank, bad safety valve, worn pump seals, bad pump valve pla…

Main causes: bad safety valve, pressure switch failure…

Main cause: faulty output air pressure regulator…

Main causes: rusted air tank, loose air tube fitting connections, bad check valve, leaky safety valve, bad tank drain va…

Main cause: bad air tank pressure gauge…

Main causes: loose air tube fitting connections, bad check valve, faulty safety valve, damaged or corroded air tank, bad…

Most common repair guides to help fix your air compressors

These step-by-step repair guides will help you safely fix what’s broken on your air compressor.

How to replace an air compressor pressure switch

How to replace an air compressor pressure switch

You can replace a broken air compressor pressure switch in about 45 minutes. …

Repair time and Difficulty

 45 minutes or less
How to rebuild an air compressor pump

How to rebuild an air compressor pump

If the air compressor won't fill the tank with compressed air, rebuild the pump using these steps in about 45 minutes. …

Repair time and Difficulty

 45 minutes or less
How to replace an air compressor check valve

How to replace an air compressor check valve

You can replace a defective air compressor check valve in about 10 minutes.…

Repair time and Difficulty

 15 minutes or less

Effective articles & videos to help repair your air compressors

Use the advice and tips in these articles and videos to get the most out of your air compressor.

How to reduce air compressor noise

How to reduce air compressor noise

Find out how to reduce air compressor noise.…

The unseen dangers of air compressors

The unseen dangers of air compressors

Learn about the possible dangers associated with using an air compressor and how you can reduce the risks of property da…

How to maintain an oil-lubricated air compressor

How to maintain an oil-lubricated air compressor

See how to perform routine maintenance on your oil-lubricated air compressor.…

Parts & More

Boating
Carpet Cleaner
Cooktop
Dishwasher
Dryer
Exercise Cycle
Gas Line Trimmer
Parts
Power Rake
Range
Side-By-Side Refrigerator
Washer