j

13/06/2005 1:27 PM

Refinishing furniture with paint sprayer

I have a number of wood items that I plan to sand down and paint with a
new paint sprayer I bought. My question is this, can I do the painting
outside (rather than in the garage) so I don't have to worry about
paint getting on everything? If so, do I have to worry about the dust
from outdoors getting on whatever I paint? Finally, how far will the
paint mist carry? I wouldn't want it to end up on my house, fence,
etc.

Thanks,

Jason


This topic has 4 replies

j

in reply to [email protected] on 13/06/2005 1:27 PM

14/06/2005 10:42 AM

Thanks to Bob and Michael for the helpful replies.

- Jason

MW

Michael White

in reply to [email protected] on 13/06/2005 1:27 PM

14/06/2005 12:52 AM

[email protected] ([email protected]) wrote on Monday 13 June
2005 03:27 pm:

> I have a number of wood items that I plan to sand down and paint with a
> new paint sprayer I bought. My question is this, can I do the painting
> outside (rather than in the garage) so I don't have to worry about
> paint getting on everything? If so, do I have to worry about the dust
> from outdoors getting on whatever I paint? Finally, how far will the
> paint mist carry? I wouldn't want it to end up on my house, fence,
> etc.
>
> Thanks,
>
> Jason

Jason,

It depends on what type of sprayer you're talking about. If you have a
cheap sprayer, or an air sprayer, then it'll probably end up everywhere.
But if you get a decent airless sprayer (~2800-3000 PSI), the paint dries a
very short distance from the sprayer (~10-15 feet). At that point, it's
just a fine dust that shouldn't stick to anything.

As far as dust outside, that depends on your environment. You might want to
set up a test piece and see what sticks. I wouldn't do it near dusk,
though, due to the bugs you'll attract.
--
Michael White "To protect people from the effects of folly is to
fill the world with fools." -Herbert Spencer

Bs

"BobS"

in reply to [email protected] on 13/06/2005 1:27 PM

14/06/2005 11:10 AM

Jason,

Make up a temporary paint booth in your garage. A simple frame wrapped in
some plastic sheeting (drop cloth) or hang it from the ceiling - you can get
real creative here. Make it large enough so you can either walk around the
item being sprayed or place it on a lazy-susan type work surface where you
can easily spin the item around. Place some plastic on the floor, wear old
clothes, a proper face mask and a hat.

Yes - you need to worry about dust and bugs landing smack in the middle of
the wet paint. If they do, let them be and fix the problem after the paint
dries. Avoid the temptation to pick a bug off wet paint - you'll only mess
it up more than the bug will...

Bob S.


<[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>I have a number of wood items that I plan to sand down and paint with a
> new paint sprayer I bought. My question is this, can I do the painting
> outside (rather than in the garage) so I don't have to worry about
> paint getting on everything? If so, do I have to worry about the dust
> from outdoors getting on whatever I paint? Finally, how far will the
> paint mist carry? I wouldn't want it to end up on my house, fence,
> etc.
>
> Thanks,
>
> Jason
>

DD

David

in reply to [email protected] on 13/06/2005 1:27 PM

13/06/2005 1:35 PM

The rule is: the paint will carry twice as far as you expect it to.
Hopefully your insurance will cover any lawsuits.

Sounds like you are already "worried", so I'd say, "yes, you have to
worry about dust".

Dave

[email protected] wrote:

> I have a number of wood items that I plan to sand down and paint with a
> new paint sprayer I bought. My question is this, can I do the painting
> outside (rather than in the garage) so I don't have to worry about
> paint getting on everything? If so, do I have to worry about the dust
> from outdoors getting on whatever I paint? Finally, how far will the
> paint mist carry? I wouldn't want it to end up on my house, fence,
> etc.
>
> Thanks,
>
> Jason
>


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