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roncarolnikko(at)hotmail. Guest
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Posted: Sat Jan 21, 2006 1:33 pm Post subject: paint hoses- water trap |
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I have 50' hose to water trap which I leave barely hissing then 50' more to
workshop then 25' to gun. The first 50' acts as a condensor for water
separation. 50-60 psi at compressor gives good consistant gun pressure.
HVLP may require a secondary tank near gun. Raining cats and dogs in
Oregon, but painting anyway. Ron NB Or
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Lynn Matteson
Joined: 10 Jan 2006 Posts: 2778 Location: Grass Lake, Michigan
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Posted: Sat Jan 21, 2006 3:20 pm Post subject: paint hoses- water trap |
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Hi Ron-
On my HVLP conversion gun, I used 25 feet of hose to lower temperature
of compressed air, then through a regulator/filter set to 40 psi, then
15 feet of hose to gun which has an attached pressure regulator set to
10 psi...works great. Watch that humidity, Ron...Polyfiber tells me no
higher than 70%. I can't imagine Oregon at less than that...is it?
Lynn
On Saturday, January 21, 2006, at 04:32 PM, ron schick wrote:
Quote: |
<roncarolnikko(at)hotmail.com>
I have 50' hose to water trap which I leave barely hissing then 50'
more to
workshop then 25' to gun. The first 50' acts as a condensor for water
separation. 50-60 psi at compressor gives good consistant gun
pressure.
HVLP may require a secondary tank near gun. Raining cats and dogs in
Oregon, but painting anyway. Ron NB Or
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_________________ Lynn
Kitfox IV-Jabiru 2200
N369LM |
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aldaniels(at)fmtc.com Guest
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Posted: Sat Jan 21, 2006 7:02 pm Post subject: paint hoses- water trap |
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The Poly stuff is a little different than many paints in that humidity
speeds the drying. I have seen people wet the floor of the paint area on
a warm day and try and spray polytone with interesting results. It
looked like there were spider webs everywhere. It was drying before it
hit the plane and caused all sorts of a mess. Blush retarder can really
help.
Lynn Matteson wrote:
Quote: |
Hi Ron-
On my HVLP conversion gun, I used 25 feet of hose to lower temperature
of compressed air, then through a regulator/filter set to 40 psi, then
15 feet of hose to gun which has an attached pressure regulator set to
10 psi...works great. Watch that humidity, Ron...Polyfiber tells me no
higher than 70%. I can't imagine Oregon at less than that...is it?
Lynn
On Saturday, January 21, 2006, at 04:32 PM, ron schick wrote:
>
><roncarolnikko(at)hotmail.com>
>
>I have 50' hose to water trap which I leave barely hissing then 50'
>more to
>workshop then 25' to gun. The first 50' acts as a condensor for water
>separation. 50-60 psi at compressor gives good consistant gun
>pressure.
>HVLP may require a secondary tank near gun. Raining cats and dogs in
>Oregon, but painting anyway. Ron NB Or
>
>
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Lynn Matteson
Joined: 10 Jan 2006 Posts: 2778 Location: Grass Lake, Michigan
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Posted: Sat Jan 21, 2006 8:51 pm Post subject: paint hoses- water trap |
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That's probably why my Polyfiber rep told me to not spray at 70%
humidity or over. I was lucky that most of my spraying was done at
about 60%, and at less than about 70 degrees...and at one point at 2
am, just to get that last coat on and done with!
Lynn
On Saturday, January 21, 2006, at 10:02 PM, Alan & Linda Daniels wrote:
Quote: |
<aldaniels(at)fmtc.com>
The Poly stuff is a little different than many paints in that humidity
speeds the drying. I have seen people wet the floor of the paint area
on
a warm day and try and spray polytone with interesting results. It
looked like there were spider webs everywhere. It was drying before it
hit the plane and caused all sorts of a mess. Blush retarder can really
help.
|
| - The Matronics Kitfox-List Email Forum - | | Use the List Feature Navigator to browse the many List utilities available such as the Email Subscriptions page, Archive Search & Download, 7-Day Browse, Chat, FAQ, Photoshare, and much more:
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_________________ Lynn
Kitfox IV-Jabiru 2200
N369LM |
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