I am using this Harbor Freight, siphon feed, conventional spray gun. I am using Summit Racing epoxy primer. Temps around here are a bit humid, about 70 degrees. I have the gun set to 40 PSI
I set the gun up and spray two relatively thin wet coats and follow up with 2 more wet coats after the flash time.
I seem to have spots that have dry spray and others have some orange peel but it is random.
I sprayed an inner fender and some bumper to frame mount pieces. these had this problem.
Sounds like it is simply technique. The larger panels where you can keep it wet going across are working out well and the pieces where you need to shoot from different angles to get into spots and what not is causing you to get dry spots.
Pretty hard to give much pointers on this one, you need to pay attention to laying it on the same everywhere and this is easier said than done, it takes practice.
Sounds like it is simply technique. The larger panels where you can keep it wet going across are working out well and the pieces where you need to shoot from different angles to get into spots and what not is causing you to get dry spots.
Pretty hard to give much pointers on this one, you need to pay attention to laying it on the same everywhere and this is easier said than done, it takes practice.
Yes, I try really hard to spray the inner fenders evenly but the angles are hard to keep with. I especially have a problem spraying the underside of the inner fenders.
Are the dry sprays due to me being to far away from the part I am spraying? Is this also my orange peel?
Yes, it isn't wet enough. The problem, the balance you need to keep to spray it wet enough on something like that without spraying it too wet and getting runs. Overlap is the hardest part. You are spraying all kids of angles and hitting the same spots sometimes over and over, at that point it can get too much applied and run. It is a fine balance to spray something like that all over without doing this.
Yes, it isn't wet enough. The problem, the balance you need to keep to spray it wet enough on something like that without spraying it too wet and getting runs. Overlap is the hardest part. You are spraying all kids of angles and hitting the same spots sometimes over and over, at that point it can get too much applied and run. It is a fine balance to spray something like that all over without doing this.
Right, Basically I have to maintain good overlap without spraying too much on one spot. So basically when I spray my other inner fender I will try to focus more on overlap to minimize dry spray.
Try and keep your gun 6-8 inches away with a 75% overlap, slow your spray speed down and watch it going on, you can tell if its going on dry or not, you want a nice wet film and the overspray will melt in.
You need enough light to see what's happening. I used to hold a trouble light in one hand. probably not a good idea with all the flamable fumes . but I rode without a helmet, drank water from a hose, we didn't have seat belts, etc.
Try and keep your gun 6-8 inches away with a 75% overlap, slow your spray speed down and watch it going on, you can tell if its going on dry or not, you want a nice wet film and the overspray will melt in.
I'm not a pro painter by any stretch of the imagination, but that has got to be too close for a conventional siphon gun. Mine sprays good at a distance of about 12 inches and pressure around 45-50 psi with trigger pulled. Huge fan out too, probably 12 inches easy...not that you need that to paint inner fenders.
I think 6 to 8 on a siphon with that much pressure would guarantee runs
I must say that I hold the gun pretty close, closer than 6-8 inches. I move quickly and just keep overlapping. Might just be my gun setting but it seems to work for me.
Just remember that if you are painting in your garage to beware of your hot water heater if its in there. As a retired Fire captain I have seen people blown own to the street when those fumes reach their ignition point. Also be sure you have a big enough air compressor. I bought 2 little ones and my paint would be dry in some spots and Ok in others. If your compressor is running all the time it's not keeping up. I bought a 80 gallon 7 hp compressor nd all the problems went away. Just my experience.
Just remember that if you are painting in your garage to beware of your hot water heater if its in there. As a retired Fire captain I have seen people blown own to the street when those fumes reach their ignition point. Also be sure you have a big enough air compressor. I bought 2 little ones and my paint would be dry in some spots and Ok in others. If your compressor is running all the time it's not keeping up. I bought a 80 gallon 7 hp compressor nd all the problems went away. Just my experience.
I do my primer in my driveway. I will do the final paint in my garage with the floors hosed down, since I'll have more room in my small cramped garage with my car back together. This car is not a restoration, more of a hot rod so I am not concerned with getting paint on every nook and cranny. My compressor keeps up fine, in fact barely turns on when I spray. Thanks for your concern though, that is pretty dumb though to paint near a flame.
Just curious, I have limited space and only one work stand so when primed parts flash I try to carefully move them to a spot to dry while I prep the next piece. The primed parts are still soft and despite tryna be careful sometimes I end up nicking it and a small spot gets exposed. Do you guys just touch up with some rattle can primer or do you guys try to mix up some more epoxy for the small touch up?
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