What's the story with nozzle size & lacquer spraying?
OK, smee again...
Went to Glenfords, looked at lots of guns, (all Chinese,) talked lots of BS with the bloke there & I'm still a tad confused. I think he was too when I'd finished with him.
They only had one HVLP gun, a cheapie with a .8mm nozzle.
I know fug'all about spray'n licquer & the plastic laminated cheat sheet in the shop says I need a nozzle that is 1.8mm or bigger for the job. :confused:
I've left it all on the shelf & come home & gone ferret'n through this forum searching on "lacquer spraying" & come up with lots of good stuff BUT I still don't have all the answers.
What's the story with nozzle size & lacquer spraying?
Where can I find a good HVLP gravity feed gun for spraying lacquer on small stuff?
Woodturning size stuff, not the workbench, the shed, or the Mrs' bum.
Should I be looking in a spray paint'n shop?
Yeah spraying.... like a Tom Cat.
Love spray painting Koff Koff.............
Well I am a bit tired and can't think too well....
I have a $30 on special Super Cheap "compressor" bits and fittings kit (or was it more???) that came with a spray gun... 1 liter pot on it...
I picked up a touch up gun with a 1 liter pot, after a protracted fight with a seller on ebay , who took my money and wouldn't send it.... that was ummmmm $45 all up or something.
And I also have a CHEAP plastic air brush - a super cheap auto special....
Now I figure that I have all bases covered, until I need to spray ships.
The air brush is FANTASTIC, cause it sprays such an incredibly fine and soft spray, that turns even (thinned) ordinary oil based enamels into super shiny colored things.
I sprayed the back and sides of my remote controls, my mobile phone etc., etc., etc..
Like Whaaaaaaaaaa this is brilliant.
A heaps better finish than the spray can's.
And the touch up gun is brilliant too.. sprays heaps more than the air brush, both in volume and area, for bigger jobs.
And the 1 liter pot gun is fantastic too... only it puts down even more paint over a bigger area...
So I guess spraying and gun selection is all surface area, and you match your paint loads in the guns too that.
I am going to be using my touch up gun to spray poly-urethane paints over my guitar when I have stripped, modified, de-painted, reknobbed and rewired it......
It's a good size for that job, 2 or so coats per side and all around.
Wash the gun and leave it all dry for a day or two and then a couple more thin coats...
(I have not read the instructions for the paint yet.. so I am making up the respraying cycle).
If I want to do faint or fine highlighting in small areas, I'll use the air brush...
And when I want to respray my car, depending up on the size of the part, and the amount of paint I need to put on... (a few light coats etc.) I use the 200ml touch up gun or the 1 liter gun..
So it's ALL marvelous..
I am now right into plain enamel paints and turps for thinners....
Bingo.
And I run my compressor on OLIVE OIL, the air is fed through a vapor seperator, then through about 40 feet of hose to allow it all to cool down.
The air is fed through a condensate trap, an activated charcoal cannister of my own design, I use a fresh air respirator of my own design, and it's all wonderful.
No stinky oils.... clean dry fresh air... great guns... excellent paint jobs....
Excellent!:yippy: