Bob Gerritsen
Member
- Joined
- Feb 10, 2012
- Messages
- 241
Let me start by saying I have very little experience with spray painting, I have a Wagner W610 and have played with this a bit with pretty reasonable results. Thought it was fun and can imagine getting the hang of it. Then loads of work came along that did not require any spray painting and the Wagner stayed on the shelve. Actually, I did have some paint jobs but as my neighbor at the workshop build a spray booth in his workshop he got to spray those jobs. The first project was a disaster, lots of start up problems to deal with but now he has things sorted and produces very nice finishes.
However, I have a request for an estimate on built ins now that involves loads of spray painting and passing all of that on to someone else seems a bit of a shame. The quality of the work need not be A+, it sort of has to match existing cabinets and those are brush painted. Just saying a top, no flaws finish isn't the goal here. This would be THE chance to get some spray painting done myself and the results I've gotten with the Wagner would surely be good enough. For this job I'm thinking spraying on site would be the way to go. I've seen the youtube vids and those look promising but need to know from experts what the deal is here so I've a couple of questions:
1- How much overspray can there be on site and is this manageable?
2- How precise is spraying on site? I'm thinking about maybe spraying doors while they are fitted to the cabinets, can this be done? Maybe not all coats but only the last coat.
3- Is the Wagner system ok or do I need something else?
4- What kind of paint or lacquer is best used on site? Water based or alkyd?
Eventually I'm sure I have plenty more questions but hoping these will make the smoke clear up a bit. I also realize all answers depend on the system used, I'm not stuck to the Wagner, just trying to get a good idea of the options I have.
From what I remember from playing with the Wagner unit is a couple of things. One can only dial in the amount of paint/lacquer and air, the pressure however is a given. This made it necessary for me to thin the water based paint down so much, it really made the wood fibers rise a lot, not only with the first layer. This means more sanding and more coats needed. Not sure what alkyd based paint would do but an expert I had try the Wagner said more pressure was needed to be able to use slightly thicker product.
It would be great to have a system that works well on site, without the use for a dedicated booth, it could then also be used in the shop.
Looking forward to answers and suggestions.
Thanks so much, Bob.
However, I have a request for an estimate on built ins now that involves loads of spray painting and passing all of that on to someone else seems a bit of a shame. The quality of the work need not be A+, it sort of has to match existing cabinets and those are brush painted. Just saying a top, no flaws finish isn't the goal here. This would be THE chance to get some spray painting done myself and the results I've gotten with the Wagner would surely be good enough. For this job I'm thinking spraying on site would be the way to go. I've seen the youtube vids and those look promising but need to know from experts what the deal is here so I've a couple of questions:
1- How much overspray can there be on site and is this manageable?
2- How precise is spraying on site? I'm thinking about maybe spraying doors while they are fitted to the cabinets, can this be done? Maybe not all coats but only the last coat.
3- Is the Wagner system ok or do I need something else?
4- What kind of paint or lacquer is best used on site? Water based or alkyd?
Eventually I'm sure I have plenty more questions but hoping these will make the smoke clear up a bit. I also realize all answers depend on the system used, I'm not stuck to the Wagner, just trying to get a good idea of the options I have.
From what I remember from playing with the Wagner unit is a couple of things. One can only dial in the amount of paint/lacquer and air, the pressure however is a given. This made it necessary for me to thin the water based paint down so much, it really made the wood fibers rise a lot, not only with the first layer. This means more sanding and more coats needed. Not sure what alkyd based paint would do but an expert I had try the Wagner said more pressure was needed to be able to use slightly thicker product.
It would be great to have a system that works well on site, without the use for a dedicated booth, it could then also be used in the shop.
Looking forward to answers and suggestions.
Thanks so much, Bob.