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Thread: Nozzle Size For Spraying Shellac
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7th May 2007, 10:13 PM #1Awaiting Email Confirmation
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Nozzle Size For Spraying Shellac
Have done a lot of searching and reading on this forum and other places trying to work out the right size nozzle for spaying shellac. Am going to purchase a HVLP gun (brand yet to be decided by limited budget. Suggestions welcome) that I will mainly use for this purpose. Have 7 chairs to refinish (silky oak) a medicine cabinet, dresser (english oak) and wardrobe (hoop pine) that are ready to go.
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8th May 2007, 06:10 AM #2Intermediate Member
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I'd pick a 1.5, that's a good all around size that I use a lot.
If you get something really thick you can just reduce it a little.
Look at the "Astro" brand guns.
Unbelievably good quality for under $100.00.
I use one all the time for car painting.
I have guns costing 5 times as much and they're better but
not by that much.
But with any HVLP you need a lot of air,
You need a pretty good size compressor.
And the std 1/4" hose fittings won't allow it to spray to it's true potential. I got the 3/8" ones from Home Depot and they made a huge difference.
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8th May 2007, 10:58 AM #3SENIOR MEMBER
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I presume you intend to finish the articles in shellac, if you are then you would also be looking at doing some french polishing to obtain a nice finish.
If thats the case spraying the shellac won't help you much because
* it doesn't spray well as the metho drys out so fast with the air from the gun the finish will be no better and probably a lot worse than brushing it on
* You will also use far more material as spraying results in a 50% loss of material
*you will have to thin the shellac a lot and that will mean you will have to put on far more coats of shellac than if you applied it with a brush, pad or other means.
* as you are spraying chairs there will be a lot of waste doing the legs etc as a lot of the spray will miss the actual wood.
Having said that a HVLP gun would not be a suitable gun espacially as JCCLARK has stated you need a lot of air a big hose and compressor. Unless you already have these you will be spending a lot with no great gain for your particular job.
If you must spray a low pressure gun would be a more suitable gun to use.
But I would apply it by hand
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8th May 2007, 10:43 PM #4Awaiting Email Confirmation
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Thanks for the feedback. I have the compressor (13cfm) but only 1/4'" fittings. Think I will give it a go by hand as I would like a high quality finish and realize over spray would also be a problem. Fantastic forum, thanks again
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