So if you are supplying the house with the generator and you run the compressor you have no issues? If that is the case then the problem is in the wiring you are using that does blow the breaker. What size and how long is the run?
If you can run the compressor from the generator through the house there has got to be a problem with the only variant, that is the wiring from set to garage. A loose connection will drive up amperage a lot, not to mention it can start a fire. That is the last thing I can think of, need some of the electrical wizards to jump in.
Here's how it's wired. The lugs on the generator are a connection point for the cable from the house and the 'extension cord' that goes into the garage to provide 220v power for whatever I plug into it. The end of the cable at the house is connected to the fuse panel at a 50A breaker.
In normal usage, the house provides a 50A line to the garage. Everything I can plug into the cord, works just fine.
If the power is out, you switch off the panel MAIN breaker, fire up the generator to backfeed the house through that 50A breaker and the garage too,of course. I never have gotten to use the generator to do this yet.
Now I am working on getting the generator to supply power to JUST the garage, as a test, before trying to feed the house.
Clear as mud to everyone? Think of it as the generator is T'd into the line from the house to the garage. It does nothing during normal operation of the power from the house.
The problem I'm having is(with the 50A panel breaker off ,not feeding anything in the house) the output breaker on the generator tripping as soon as a load is put on it. A 5hp motor turning a couple of v-belts and a flywheel (not the air compressor) is not much of a load.
If I get time this weekend I will measure the amp draw of my compressor and the power hammer motor, running on power from the house. This will give the experts on here an idea of what the loads are I'm trying to run.
The problem is in the generator and I need help sorting it out.