Anyone out there bought one of these sprayers -- and used it?
The High Volume Low pressure type [ not the airless type ].
Did it work as advertised? More important still, has anyone used this
type sprater to paint emulsion in interior rooms? How does it avoid
coating the entire room with a layer of colored dust?
Any comments, information appreciated.
John Hewitt, Malaga, Spain
--
Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com
On Thu, 6 Mar 2008 10:20:24 -0800 (PST), "[email protected]"
<[email protected]> wrote:
Thank you and t'others who replied. The first part of my query is
answered. It works [ like other similar models, Robert, thank you].
But the other question, will it coat a room with dust / paint dust /
crap? That's imporatnt to me, 'cos that's my primary interest.
I have a HP compressor sprayer; using *that* inside a room is suicide
[ painticide / dusticide ?].
But Earlex have promtional videos that show the system being used in a
closed room. Hmmmm ???
John
>Hello, John. Not to be glib, but a quick Google search of this group
>can give you more information than you can easily process in a sitting
>about HVLP and how they work.
>
>I know the Earlex makes a 2 and 3 stage turbine machine, so pretty
>much anything you can dig up on a 2 stage machine (a Harbor Freight,
>Wagner, etc.) will be relevant to your question.
>
>Robert
John Hewitt, Malaga, Spain
--
Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com
On Mar 6, 9:57 am, [email protected] wrote:
> Anyone out there bought one of these sprayers -- and used it?
> The High Volume Low pressure type [ not the airless type ].
>
> Did it work as advertised? More important still, has anyone used this
> type sprater to paint emulsion in interior rooms? How does it avoid
> coating the entire room with a layer of colored dust?
>
> Any comments, information appreciated.
> John Hewitt, Malaga, Spain
>
> --
> Posted via a free Usenet account fromhttp://www.teranews.com
Hello, John. Not to be glib, but a quick Google search of this group
can give you more information than you can easily process in a sitting
about HVLP and how they work.
I know the Earlex makes a 2 and 3 stage turbine machine, so pretty
much anything you can dig up on a 2 stage machine (a Harbor Freight,
Wagner, etc.) will be relevant to your question.
Robert
Yes ... I bought the Earlex 5000 when it was on special at WoodCraft
last spring. I have only used it to spray furniture and cabinets. NC
laquer and WB lacquer on furniture, oil based primer and latex paint on
cabinets. For an inexpensive sprayer, it meets my needs. Mine arrived
with 1.5 mm and 2.0 mm needles. Could have used the 2.5 mm needle for
the primer, but with a lttle thinning (10 %) the 2.0 mm worked OK.
Latex paint was also thinned a bit (5%) but coated beatifully. The air
hose is a bit short (about 12 feet) to do whole rooms I think, unless
they are closet-like. The laquer sprayed quite nicely. Spray pattern
is well defined. The spray gun is the type that always blows air, the
trigger only controls the liquid feed. (Perhaps this is common with
turbine models.) The gun is easy to disassemble and clean. Back-spray is
minimal on open surfaces, as one would expect with HVLP, but there will
always be some. Expect any unmasked surface to receive SOME quantity of
spray in an enclosed volume. To date, I have only sprayed outdoors.
cheers ...
Brian Hoyt
Stillwater Lake, Nova Scotia
[email protected] wrote:
> Anyone out there bought one of these sprayers -- and used it?
> The High Volume Low pressure type [ not the airless type ].
>
> Did it work as advertised? More important still, has anyone used this
> type sprater to paint emulsion in interior rooms? How does it avoid
> coating the entire room with a layer of colored dust?
>
> Any comments, information appreciated.
> John Hewitt, Malaga, Spain
>
ROY! wrote:
> On Thu, 06 Mar 2008 13:24:17 -0400, Brian <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> Yes ... I bought the Earlex 5000 when it was on special at WoodCraft
>> last spring. I have only used it to spray furniture and cabinets. NC
>> laquer and WB lacquer on furniture, oil based primer and latex paint on
>> cabinets. For an inexpensive sprayer, it meets my needs. Mine arrived
>> with 1.5 mm and 2.0 mm needles. Could have used the 2.5 mm needle for
>> the primer, but with a lttle thinning (10 %) the 2.0 mm worked OK.
>> Latex paint was also thinned a bit (5%) but coated beatifully. The air
>> hose is a bit short (about 12 feet) to do whole rooms I think, unless
>> they are closet-like. The laquer sprayed quite nicely. Spray pattern
>> is well defined. The spray gun is the type that always blows air, the
>> trigger only controls the liquid feed. (Perhaps this is common with
>> turbine models.) The gun is easy to disassemble and clean. Back-spray is
>> minimal on open surfaces, as one would expect with HVLP, but there will
>> always be some. Expect any unmasked surface to receive SOME quantity of
>> spray in an enclosed volume. To date, I have only sprayed outdoors.
>>
>> cheers ...
>>
>> Brian Hoyt
>> Stillwater Lake, Nova Scotia
>>
>
> Brian,
> Many thanks for the tips and sharing your experiences with the
> Earlex. Any additional comments would be welcome and appreciated.
>
> Roy!
> New Jersey, The Tollbooth State
Anything in particular you want to know?
cheers ...
Brian Hoyt
Stillwater Lake, Nova Scotia
On Thu, 06 Mar 2008 13:24:17 -0400, Brian <[email protected]> wrote:
>Yes ... I bought the Earlex 5000 when it was on special at WoodCraft
>last spring. I have only used it to spray furniture and cabinets. NC
>laquer and WB lacquer on furniture, oil based primer and latex paint on
>cabinets. For an inexpensive sprayer, it meets my needs. Mine arrived
>with 1.5 mm and 2.0 mm needles. Could have used the 2.5 mm needle for
>the primer, but with a lttle thinning (10 %) the 2.0 mm worked OK.
>Latex paint was also thinned a bit (5%) but coated beatifully. The air
>hose is a bit short (about 12 feet) to do whole rooms I think, unless
>they are closet-like. The laquer sprayed quite nicely. Spray pattern
>is well defined. The spray gun is the type that always blows air, the
>trigger only controls the liquid feed. (Perhaps this is common with
>turbine models.) The gun is easy to disassemble and clean. Back-spray is
>minimal on open surfaces, as one would expect with HVLP, but there will
>always be some. Expect any unmasked surface to receive SOME quantity of
>spray in an enclosed volume. To date, I have only sprayed outdoors.
>
>cheers ...
>
>Brian Hoyt
>Stillwater Lake, Nova Scotia
>
Brian,
Many thanks for the tips and sharing your experiences with the
Earlex. Any additional comments would be welcome and appreciated.
Roy!
New Jersey, The Tollbooth State