On Thu, 24 Sep 2009 06:15:32 -0700, XR650L_Dave wrote:
On Sep 23, 9:34*pm, Bob Engelhardt wrote:
I've painted a lot of walls & ceilings with rollers (rental properties).
* I just recently came up with a technique that makes it faster &
easier. *I use a dishpan to hold the paint, with a roller screen in it.
* The roller screen I mean is the one made for painting directly from a
5 gal bucket of paint.
http://home.comcast.net/~bobengelhardt/PaintTray.jpg
I also put the dishpan in a regular roller tray to tip it up & bring the
paint to the front.
The advantages:
- it holds a lot of paint. *As much as a gallon. *So refilling time is
cut down, if not out.
- it's more secure. *Paint's not as likely to slop over the edge
- the screen works better than the solid surface of a tray.
- it's a better angle than having the screen in a 5 gal bucket, when
you're using an extension handle.
I also just discovered lambs wool roller covers. *They put a lot more
paint on the wall, per dip. *About twice as much as the synthetic covers
that I had been using. *They don't seem to hold more paint, rather
release more. *I.e., the synthetics seem to keep more paint in the
cover. *Lambs wool is lot a more expensive (about $8), but well worth it.
Cool idea.
How is the lambs wool wrt releasing little clumps- more resistant?
Is it any different from the synthetics when cleaning up?
Thanks,
Rich