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Brian Mahaney September 12th 05 03:59 PM

Interesting spraying device
 
Hello,

Recently I noticed a spraying device that seems to use a can of compressed
air attached to a small cup that contains stain, dye, etc. The device
appears in the August 2005 issue of Fine Woodworking (no. 178) on page 122
(The Finish Line section). and also on page 85 of Jeff Jewitt's Great Wood
Finishes, a Step by Step Guide to Beautiful Results. The two sources seem
to have different models of a very similar device, but the principle seems
the same. Curiously, both sources are written by Jeff Jewitt. I searched
his website, but could not find this device. Perhaps I was looking for the
wrong key words. Does anyone know where I can find this type of sprayer?
Does anyone own one of these, and what are its strengths, weaknesses,
primary uses, etc?

Thanks,
Brian

Robert Allison September 12th 05 04:57 PM

Brian Mahaney wrote:

Hello,

Recently I noticed a spraying device that seems to use a can of compressed
air attached to a small cup that contains stain, dye, etc. The device
appears in the August 2005 issue of Fine Woodworking (no. 178) on page 122
(The Finish Line section). and also on page 85 of Jeff Jewitt's Great Wood
Finishes, a Step by Step Guide to Beautiful Results. The two sources seem
to have different models of a very similar device, but the principle seems
the same. Curiously, both sources are written by Jeff Jewitt. I searched
his website, but could not find this device. Perhaps I was looking for the
wrong key words. Does anyone know where I can find this type of sprayer?
Does anyone own one of these, and what are its strengths, weaknesses,
primary uses, etc?

Thanks,
Brian



Those are available from a number of places. I got one from
my paint store to do a bit of touch up on a metal project. I
could get the paint matched and then spray it on with the
sprayer without having to call in my painters.

IMHO, these are kind of throw away devices. I still have the
one that I bought, but have only used it twice. It is a bit
of a pain unless you are only doing a small amount of work and
for some reason find that it is easier to spray (which
happens). They need to be cleaned thorougly, or you will
suffer the same effects as a clogged can of spray paint.

I got mine from Sherwin Williams paint store, but they have
them at Harbor Freight, Home depot, etc.

Here is one:

http://www.harborfreight.com/cpi/cta...temnumber=1102

--
Robert Allison
Rimshot, Inc.
Georgetown, TX

nospambob September 12th 05 07:33 PM

The Preval units are handy for small jobs and have been on the market
for years.

On Mon, 12 Sep 2005 14:59:27 GMT, Brian Mahaney
wrote:

Hello,

Recently I noticed a spraying device that seems to use a can of compressed
air attached to a small cup that contains stain, dye, etc. The device
appears in the August 2005 issue of Fine Woodworking (no. 178) on page 122
(The Finish Line section). and also on page 85 of Jeff Jewitt's Great Wood
Finishes, a Step by Step Guide to Beautiful Results. The two sources seem
to have different models of a very similar device, but the principle seems
the same. Curiously, both sources are written by Jeff Jewitt. I searched
his website, but could not find this device. Perhaps I was looking for the
wrong key words. Does anyone know where I can find this type of sprayer?
Does anyone own one of these, and what are its strengths, weaknesses,
primary uses, etc?

Thanks,
Brian


Pat Barber September 12th 05 07:45 PM

Preval Paint Sprayers

http://www.bestgun.com/en-us/dept_103.html

Brian Mahaney wrote:

Hello,

Recently I noticed a spraying device that seems to use a can of compressed
air attached to a small cup that contains stain, dye, etc. The device
appears in the August 2005 issue of Fine Woodworking (no. 178) on page 122
(The Finish Line section). and also on page 85 of Jeff Jewitt's Great Wood
Finishes, a Step by Step Guide to Beautiful Results.


Puckdropper September 12th 05 10:31 PM

Brian Mahaney wrote in
:

Hello,

Recently I noticed a spraying device that seems to use a can of
compressed air attached to a small cup that contains stain, dye, etc.
The device appears in the August 2005 issue of Fine Woodworking (no.
178) on page 122 (The Finish Line section). and also on page 85 of
Jeff Jewitt's Great Wood Finishes, a Step by Step Guide to Beautiful
Results. The two sources seem to have different models of a very
similar device, but the principle seems the same. Curiously, both
sources are written by Jeff Jewitt. I searched his website, but could
not find this device. Perhaps I was looking for the wrong key words.
Does anyone know where I can find this type of sprayer? Does anyone
own one of these, and what are its strengths, weaknesses, primary
uses, etc?

Thanks,
Brian


I haven't seen the device you're talking about, but it sounds like an air
brush. They usually have a small container for thin paint and use
compressed air (either from an air compressor or can of propellant) to
paint things.

They're a common thing in hobby shops, and they'll also run off your shop
air supply so you can save money off of the aerosol cans.

Puckdropper

--
www.uncreativelabs.net

Old computers are getting to be a lost art. Here at Uncreative Labs, we
still enjoy using the old computers. Sometimes we want to see how far a
particular system can go, other times we use a stock system to remind
ourselves of what we once had.

To email me directly, send a message to puckdropper (at) fastmail.fm

Brian Mahaney September 13th 05 02:59 PM

On Mon, 12 Sep 2005 14:59:27 GMT, Brian Mahaney wrote:

Hello,

Recently I noticed a spraying device that seems to use a can of compressed
air attached to a small cup that contains stain, dye, etc. The device
appears in the August 2005 issue of Fine Woodworking (no. 178) on page 122
(The Finish Line section). and also on page 85 of Jeff Jewitt's Great Wood
Finishes, a Step by Step Guide to Beautiful Results. The two sources seem
to have different models of a very similar device, but the principle seems
the same. Curiously, both sources are written by Jeff Jewitt. I searched
his website, but could not find this device. Perhaps I was looking for the
wrong key words. Does anyone know where I can find this type of sprayer?
Does anyone own one of these, and what are its strengths, weaknesses,
primary uses, etc?

Thanks,
Brian


Thank you for the responses. I still haven't found the device that Jeff
Jewitt uses in the photos I mentioned. After looking at the pictures
again, I think they are both the exact same device. I did find the Preval
sprayers. I bought one and tried it. The results were not good for what I
tried. I tried to spray some water based analine dye. Much of what came
out failed to atomize. With some practice I was able to get it to look a
little better. I'll try it with some other stuff to see how it works.
Maybe it will work well with other liquids like lacquer. I would still
like to find and try the one in the pictures I saw. I'll keep searching.

Thanks again,
Brian

Dave September 13th 05 03:15 PM

Try the Critter.


"Brian Mahaney" wrote in message
...
On Mon, 12 Sep 2005 14:59:27 GMT, Brian Mahaney wrote:

Hello,

Recently I noticed a spraying device that seems to use a can of

compressed
air attached to a small cup that contains stain, dye, etc. The device
appears in the August 2005 issue of Fine Woodworking (no. 178) on page

122
(The Finish Line section). and also on page 85 of Jeff Jewitt's Great

Wood
Finishes, a Step by Step Guide to Beautiful Results. The two sources

seem
to have different models of a very similar device, but the principle

seems
the same. Curiously, both sources are written by Jeff Jewitt. I

searched
his website, but could not find this device. Perhaps I was looking for

the
wrong key words. Does anyone know where I can find this type of

sprayer?
Does anyone own one of these, and what are its strengths, weaknesses,
primary uses, etc?

Thanks,
Brian


Thank you for the responses. I still haven't found the device that Jeff
Jewitt uses in the photos I mentioned. After looking at the pictures
again, I think they are both the exact same device. I did find the Preval
sprayers. I bought one and tried it. The results were not good for what

I
tried. I tried to spray some water based analine dye. Much of what came
out failed to atomize. With some practice I was able to get it to look a
little better. I'll try it with some other stuff to see how it works.
Maybe it will work well with other liquids like lacquer. I would still
like to find and try the one in the pictures I saw. I'll keep searching.

Thanks again,
Brian




Pat Barber September 13th 05 04:19 PM

It would be more helpful to show him what a "Critter" is:

http://www.leevalley.com/wood/page.a...at=1,190,43034

These are excellent for "certain" applications but will result in
a "LOT" of overspray. I would use it "outdoors" if you don't have
a "spray booth".




Dave wrote:

Try the Critter.


Brian Mahaney September 13th 05 04:29 PM

On Tue, 13 Sep 2005 15:19:02 GMT, Pat Barber wrote:

It would be more helpful to show him what a "Critter" is:

http://www.leevalley.com/wood/page.a...at=1,190,43034

These are excellent for "certain" applications but will result in
a "LOT" of overspray. I would use it "outdoors" if you don't have
a "spray booth".




Dave wrote:

Try the Critter.


I've seen the critter's. They look interesting, I don't have an air
compressor. I'd like one, and one may be in the cards at some point, but
not yet. Truthfully, I think I'd rather have a decent HVLP system in the
future. It's smaller. I don't have a lot of space available. I really
wasn't looking for that kind of volume. I was just hoping I could do some
small work with that little spray device, but the HVLP would be great for
more volume.

Brian

nospambob September 13th 05 07:37 PM

www.homesteadfinishing.com and ask Jeff.

On Tue, 13 Sep 2005 13:59:19 GMT, Brian Mahaney
wrote:

Thank you for the responses. I still haven't found the device that Jeff
Jewitt uses in the photos I mentioned.



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