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I know that this sounds crazy but when I first opened my cabinet shop in the
mid 80's, I spent what little money I had on sub-standard tools and didn't have anything but an old Crapsman cup gun. When I wanted to start finishing my built-ins instead of letting the painters butcher them, I went looking and realized the only way for me to get an adequate spray rig was to build it. I went from garage sale to garage sale looking for a pressure cooker with the screw down locks but couldn't find one. Finally I sprang for all new parts, built it, and I still use the rig occasionally. This is a brief description of what I used and what I did with it. New 2 1/2 gallon pressure cooker (big enough to set a gallon can into to make it easier to clean up.) Brass fittings and a poly supply line for the pick-up tube (the grey stuff for under sinks) A regulator, 2 dial pressure guages, about 15' of 1/4" air hose and an equal amount of a hose my local paint store said would handle laquer thinner. I removed the factory safety pressure relief valve and the factory pressure indicator and drilled and retapped the holes to recieve my brass fittings. One short brass nipple with a T on top - one leg of the T with a quick connect male end to supply the pressure, and one leg with a regulator and hose going to the gun to supply disbursement and delivery air. The other hole (closer to the middle of the pot) I took a brass nipple and rethreaded so the threads went futher up and when installed in the lid of the cooker left enough for connecting my pickup tube, and above the lid I connected the laquer proof line to run the liquid to the gun. Then I went out and bought a DeVilBis (sp?) JGA502 and hooked it all up and the only thing that I ever changed to this day was I got a different tip and needle set than the one that came with the gun. I can't remember which came with but paints like latex or even oil base take a bigger oriface than laquer. I pressure tested this rig to about125 lbs (hiding behind a block wall) then when I let the pressure out I could actually see the pot get smaller so I never pressurized over about 60 lbs again. I have had this pot on a hot plate to heat finishes and the next place for it is for spray adhesives. I think that I should beable to cap the inlet port and store my adhesive right in the pot. Now I have an airless rig now that I use for most things and a cup gun that covers the rest. Prices have changed alot since then and today, given the same set of circumstances, I probably would not go to all this again, but the Binks rig I wanted with the gun I wanted and got and all the accesories that I would have needed cost about $800 back then and I built mine with all new parts for under $300 including the gun (no extra tip or needle). I think the experience of building it was worth much more than the money I saved, though. I can't imagine you wanting to go through all this but if you do I would gladly give you any pointers I could. Good luck and good finishing "Lew Hodgett" wrote in message nk.net... "Tom Watson" writes: I've got a job in the shop that needs an excellent quality paint finish. snip I'm trying to view this as an opportunity to get a piece of equipment that will spray cabinet grade paint finishes but can also be used to spray exterior house paint. snip I know nothing about this. I hate painting. I also knew nothing about the subject and also hate to paint; however, like you needed to learn. A little background: Shooting 2-part linear poly on a boat is probably the most difficult paint job possible with the possible exception of commercial airplanes. A mirror finish without any runs is the minimum standard. LP materials are in excess of $100/gal, even if you get a good discount, so you don't want to make mistakes. The standard for that job is a DeVilbiss JGA gun, a 2 qt remote pressure pot and a connecting hose. Expect to pay about $400-$450 for the package, even with a trade discount. You will need a compressor that can deliver at least 15 SCFM on a continuous basis. I have a 5 HP, two stage unit with an 80 gal reservoir that does the job. Package does a great job IMHO. Think of it like buying a good cabinet saw. It only hurts onceG. HTH -- Lew S/A: Challenge, The Bullet Proof Boat, (Under Construction in the Southland) Visit: http://home.earthlink.net/~lewhodgett for Pictures |
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