Jordan, you may have gotten that info from one of my compressor posts as I've got one from them.

It's been a very good unit for my home shop uses. Early on I had a relief valve failure. One phone call and two days later I had a replacement piece from them, no hassle, no questions asked, no charge for the express shipment. After that it's worked great.

As you've figured out the "free shipping" lure is just that. Nothing's free, just that the cost is shifted.

As for the pressure issue, it's the same old numbers game that is intended to bamboozle the "more is better" crowd that doesn't understand what makes air powered equipment work. While most tools you'll use around a home shop have a minimum requirement on their spec sheet, more times than not it will be somewhere between 40-90 #'s. Many tools specify a max pressure of 125#. If you plan on the usual "suspects"; da sander, die grinder, air ratchet, air drill, and spray gun (preferably hvlp, high VOLUME, low pressure) buying more air volume is way more important than buying high pressure. That's also the reason for getting the largest tank you can afford and fit in the space available (thus the popularity of vertical tanks).

I chose the model that cranks out 20cfm at 90#. It's great to be using an air hog like a da sander and have the compressor refill the tank WHILE you're using the tool and not run continuously. The added benefit of the lower RPM system is relative quietness, regardless of where you place the unit.