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robgul

Barry Bucknell is my hero
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Not a review but a request for info . . . .

I have an ancient Clarke Jumbo compressor that came with a paint spray gun (which I've never used) - the compressor is a "continuous pump" type - i.e. does not have a tank to store compressed air. I've only ever used the Jumbo with a tyre inflator and the blower gun to shift sawdust etc.

I'm thinking about buying an electric compressor with a tank . . . will the spray gun work with this type of compressor? Research draws a blank.
 
You are better with a tank of air, I have used air brush for some 15 years and a compressor with a tank is much better.
As you use the air from a non tank the psi drops and ends up with uneven coverage
Hope this helps
 
You are better with a tank of air, I have used air brush for some 15 years and a compressor with a tank is much better.
As you use the air from a non tank the psi drops and ends up with uneven coverage
Hope this helps

That's pretty much why I am contemplating buying a tank model as the air from my current machine comes in "fits and starts" when, for example, inflating tyres -

BUT what I need to know is whether the spray gun I have will work with tank compressor . . . .
 
Spray guns require/consume air usually in cfm, the amount of air (cfm) depends upon the spray gun some spray guns consume 3-4 CFM some may consume 9 CFM or more.

Compressors generate air CFM, the amount of air CFM generated depends upon the pistons size used in the compressor etc.

You need to match your compressor to the required CFM of your spray gun.

This is just a very basic explanation but generally compressors with no tank produce low CFM so if you do buy a compressor with an air tank it could be very possible that it will supply enough air for your current spray gun.
 
True story. I brought a compressor from aldi maybe 15 years ago. Think it was £99maybe more. With a full set of air tools. 6 years ago I broke the air filter! I use it for my air assisted airless I've sprayed lacquer with the free gun. Use it for nailing. Blowgun, Use it everyday. Still going strong...empty the rusty water out every few months fine.
It's a piston compressor and is OK for what I do tbh. Avoid those oil free ones as there not great though.
 
Spraying technology is real down the rabbit hole with Alice topic. First off, I’d suggest you determine what sort of stuff you want to spray and what sort of paint you will be using that will point you to the most appropriate technology. So for painting wood, walls and nothing that needs the finest finishes which is most stuff you are probably better off with an airless or air assisted spraying setup. For spraying machines, and higher finish requirements probably a HVLP system with its own dedicated / integrated compressor such as the Fuji Q3,4,5 etc. for the finest automotive finishes there are traditional spray guns / LPLV guns that need a huge range of air pressures and volumes depending on technology.
 
My spraying plans are pretty basic - wood, possibly walls and a lot of fence (with a garden paint, not stain) - digging out the unused spray gun and it just says "Max 3.5 BAR" on the can .... so I guess I'd be OK with that if I set the compressor to that?

I also want the compressor to pump up tyres, a blow gun for sawdust shifting, nail/staple gun (probably the cheapie Silverline as used, I think, by @petermillard ) - and a very basic, small media blasting gun (Temu's finest!)
 
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