Thoughts on an Apollo sprayer

PeterJJames13

Member
Joined
Jul 18, 2018
Messages
258
Hey everyone. I've been wanting an HVLP for a while now.

Woodpeckers currently has a good price on the Apollo Precision 5 sprayers. I know lots of people use Fuji sprayers here and like them. Graco seems to be better with their airless sprayers rather than HVLP.

I'm a "buy once cry once" kind of person. Does anyone have any thoughts on the Apollo? I definitely will get a pressure pot as well for whatever sprayer I buy. Before I pull the trigger, I'd love to hear good, bad, and ugly about these. You all have been doing this MUCH longer than I have and have probably forgotten more than I even know lol.

Thanks in advance for any insight you can provide!
 
threesixright said:
Thoughts (on HVLP)?  ;)


Thanks for this. I think I get the jist of what he's saying. However my shop, nor does any job site I'm on have a compressor large enough to run a sprayer. I figured an HVLP would help with portability rather than invest in a larger compressor. Unless I'm missing something here? I appreciate the viewpoint though!
 
tdwilli1 said:
This spray gun only requires 3.5 to 3.9 CFM @ 30 PSI. I bought it and it will spray SW premium paint out of a little Bostich compressor. It works great in my CA 10G compressor also. Of course the smaller the compressor the more you have to wait for it to recycle. So if you have bigger jobs that need to get done fast you would need a larger compressor.
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B008FDMXRW/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_search_asin_title?ie=UTF8&psc=1

Thanks for this. I'm pretty much sold on an HVLP system for now and am looking for feedback on HVLP systems at this point, rather than alternatives.
 
I have been using Apollo HVLP systems for about 27 years. My first Apollo system was an 1100 turbine with 5000 spray guns.
A few years ago, I purchased a 1050VR turbine and 7500 atomizer guns. The only complaint I have had with any of the systems is with the 7500 guns. I spray different types of finishes, but I spray mostly oil base polyurethane. I had problems with finish backing up from the cup up into the cup pressure supply line. This is because the 7500 guns are non bleeder guns. Air only come out of the gun when you pull the tripper. This also turns of the pressure air supply to the cup allowing pressure in the cup & finish to back up into the pressure supply line. They have check valves to prevent this, but they did not work for me. I solved this by relocating the cup pressure supply line to a location to give constant pressure to the cup. No problems since. I have never read about anyone else having this issue, so it may just be the way I am using the guns.

The 7500 guns spray much better than the 5000 guns. I have never wished I had a different system.
 
I have a Apollo ECO 4 HVLP.  Prior to that I had a Accuspry conversion gun (used with a small 4 gallon compressor) The Accuspray was awesome but they got bought by 3m and they are no longer made and the spare parts are unavailable.

Dont know where you live but if your in So Cal I highly recommend taking the finishing class at Woodrepair products in Orange. They run you through the different types of spray guns and stains and finishes. They specialize in products for staining finishing and repairing furniture.

I took the class and was interested in buying the finish line spray gun. Talking to their finishing guy (who mixes the stains to custom colors and will match existing finishes almost exactly) He recommended the Apollo ECO 4.
He said it will spray 95% of everything they sell. Ive had mine for a couple of years now. I have yet to find something it won't spray with the proper N&N and air cap.
Their gun is a bit tricky as you can only adj spray pattern and fluid amount.

After I got used to the gun, I really do like the system and the gun. It does a excellent job. The way they described the ECO compared to the Precision Apollo turbine (both use the same gun) is the Eco is for the guy who sprays in his home shop and for finishing projects etc. The Precsion is for te finishing shop where one sprays everyday all day. However with the Precsion you can adjust the pressure. I havent found it necessary to do that yet.
I would recommend the ECO 5 which is a 5 stage turbine that will give you all you need. I hae the ECO 4 a 4 stage turbine which as I said up to now I have not found anyting I couldnt spray that I wanted to spray.

Now my jobby caveat ,
I havent used my sprayer for the last few jobs. Ive found I can wipe the stain on and brush the finish on faster on smaller jobs then take the time to set up the sprayer (filtering the finish) and afterwards cleaning up the finish and cleaning the gun etc.
However on larger jobs/projects I like the spraying option.

 
[member=1903]JD2720[/member]

I had that issue once. the fluid backed up to where it blocked the nipple on the gun where the tube from the cup to the gun goes. Once I cleaned it got the dried up fluid out cleaned up the opening I havent had the problem again.
 
Thanks, [member=10147]jobsworth[/member] ! I appreciate the feedback a LOT! Unfortunately, I couldn't be any further from So Cal - I'm in NY State. I'm fortunate enough to live real close (less than 10 minutes) to Tool Nut which is dangerous, but I don't know of too many finishing shops around here. I'm actually a Benjamin Moore dealer and have a SW store 10 minutes in the other direction (from Tool Nut) from my house. But HVLP systems are hard to find locally.
 
You can also check out the Titan Capspray line of HVLP. I recently bought a Capspray 115, which is a 6-stage turbine. Yesterday I used it to shoot a bunch of passage doors with Benjamin Moore Advance latex paint with no issues, just a matter of dialing in the correct tip, material feed and nozzle position.....
 
Tom Gensmer said:
You can also check out the Titan Capspray line of HVLP. I recently bought a Capspray 115, which is a 6-stage turbine. Yesterday I used it to shoot a bunch of passage doors with Benjamin Moore Advance latex paint with no issues, just a matter of dialing in the correct tip, material feed and nozzle position.....

Thanks, Tom! Your posts both here and on the MUf have been really helpful for me. I appreciate all your contributions. I looked at the Titan as well. I just, for some reason, can't get the fact that Wagner owns them out of my head when I think of Titan. It certainly seems to have the most power (on paper, anyway) of what I've been looking at (Fuji, Apollo, Titan).
 
PeterJJames13 said:
Tom Gensmer said:
You can also check out the Titan Capspray line of HVLP. I recently bought a Capspray 115, which is a 6-stage turbine. Yesterday I used it to shoot a bunch of passage doors with Benjamin Moore Advance latex paint with no issues, just a matter of dialing in the correct tip, material feed and nozzle position.....

Thanks, Tom! Your posts both here and on the MUf have been really helpful for me. I appreciate all your contributions. I looked at the Titan as well. I just, for some reason, can't get the fact that Wagner owns them out of my head when I think of Titan. It certainly seems to have the most power (on paper, anyway) of what I've been looking at (Fuji, Apollo, Titan).

Happy to offer my $0.02  [big grin] I selected the Titan primarily because I live ~15 minutes away from their headquarters, so service and support are easy, and I had the opportunity to try it out in a local guild meeting and was impressed. I'm sure there are other competitive units out there, but thus far with my limited experience I have had a positive experience with the Titan.
 
[member=1903]JD2720[/member] And [member=10147]jobsworth[/member] Have any of you tried the newer 7700 guns from Apollo? Any feedback? I know [member=1903]JD2720[/member] didn't have much luck with the 7500 gun, I wonder if the 7700 improved on it.
 
Tom Gensmer said:
PeterJJames13 said:
Tom Gensmer said:
You can also check out the Titan Capspray line of HVLP. I recently bought a Capspray 115, which is a 6-stage turbine. Yesterday I used it to shoot a bunch of passage doors with Benjamin Moore Advance latex paint with no issues, just a matter of dialing in the correct tip, material feed and nozzle position.....

Thanks, Tom! Your posts both here and on the MUf have been really helpful for me. I appreciate all your contributions. I looked at the Titan as well. I just, for some reason, can't get the fact that Wagner owns them out of my head when I think of Titan. It certainly seems to have the most power (on paper, anyway) of what I've been looking at (Fuji, Apollo, Titan).

Happy to offer my $0.02  [big grin] I selected the Titan primarily because I live ~15 minutes away from their headquarters, so service and support are easy, and I had the opportunity to try it out in a local guild meeting and was impressed. I'm sure there are other competitive units out there, but thus far with my limited experience I have had a positive experience with the Titan.

Thanks again Tom. Have you had any issues with the pressure settings on the turbine only being "high" and "low"? Or does it not matter because you can dial in the gun properly?
 
Ever notice that they keep adding more and more stages to these turbine units (don't care what make) and they still barely perform as well as a mediocre HVLP compressor gun. People try and praise them because they been suckered into the concept. Its a lot of money to spend for questionable performance. My first setup 12 years ago consisted of a Devilbiss Transtech gun and an Omega 8 CFM 20 gallon portable air compressor. This setup was portable and worked great on all but the very large panels spraying WB.
 
[member=68391]PeterJJames13[/member]

No I havent tried the 7700. I wonder what the changes were.
 
I’ve got a 1050vr with whatever gun it came with standard, and I couldn’t be happier with its performance for my needs. I’ve only used it with waterbased products, typically general finishes paints and clears as well as the occasional latex.I’ve not used other brand hvlp’s so can’t compare but I have no regrets.
 
jobsworth said:
[member=68391]PeterJJames13[/member]

No I havent tried the 7700. I wonder what the changes were.

[member=10147]jobsworth[/member] it seems like a lot of marketing went into the new 7700 gun. The only real difference I can see is it can be bleeding or non bleeding vs the 7500 which is non bleeding. This, of course, is from an amateur perspective. I may be missing something.
 
Thanks all - I think I'm going to go with the Apollo unit.

It was a toss up between the Capspray 115 and the Apollo, but I read (on the internet so it must be true) that Capsprays tend to lose their max pressure over time, and can also run really warm because of all the pressure it puts out. I really haven't heard anything bad said about the Apollo (which says something in itself).

I'm realistic in my expectations with it as well - not looking to shoot miles of trim or paint fences or houses with it. When the time comes and if I get more jobs calling for that I'll look into the Graco airless models for that. Just like most people won't use plunge cut saws for narrow ripping and still use a tablesaw, it's another tool to have in the coral so to say.
 
[member=68391]PeterJJames13[/member]

Which model did you decide to go with?

Just curious
 
Back
Top