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I went to repaint a shed with half a can of latex paint that had been
sitting 30 years. After 100 square feet I was tired and quit. Today I decided to try my pump-up sprayer. Not having to keep loading my brush was helpful, but the stream petered out. Then I remembered. Back when I painted a lot, I normally thinned latex paint for brushing. Out of the can, its good for rolling, but the viscosity puts a lot of drag on a brush, and its hard to brush paint into cracks and corners. I poured in about 5% water and stuck my drill-powered stirrer in. At first it sprayed great, laying down paint in strips 2€ť wide. It soon petered out. I poured it back in the can and continued. With just a brush, it was much easier than yesterday. With less viscosity, the brush moved easily. The paint spread quickly and flowed into cracks and corners. Naturally Id had trouble using a sprayer with paint that was too thick for brushing. Paint stuck to the exterior of the sprayer parts, but the inside cleaned so well that I didnt bother to disassemble the pump or valve. The achilles heel was the filter. My tip orifice is 1.25mm, but the filter uses 0.5mm squares. I call that bad engineering, needlessly restricting viscous fluids. I believe the other problem was that the paint wasnt completely mixed. A paint can has corners where the thickest paint can hide from a stirrer. Likewise, the sprayer tank has places for paint to hide from the currents a stirrer generates. I should have mixed it in a bowl-shaped container. I think the thickest paint clogged the filter. There was another problem. To squirt paint, either I had to lay the brush down, or I had to hold the pump handle and the spray handle in one hand. One-handed sprayers cost $10 to $20. Solo has one with a swivel nozzle. That would be great for painting overhead. A neighbor wants me to paint her porch ceiling. She says it isnt much. Any overhead job is €śmuch.€ť You keep loading your brush and tipping it up, and eventually paint runs down the handle. Besides, a brush with paint in the heel is hard to clean. Ill bet a job like that would be a lot easier with a sprayer in one hand to apply paint and a brush in the other hand. |
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