I've been stuck on the painting phase of my pantry build for a few weeks now and think it's time to ask some experts. For context, I'm currently spraying flat (no detail/moulding) MRMDF drawer fronts/doors.
Problems that I'm encountering
Problems that I'm encountering
- After spraying I have occasionally found long streaks (as wide as a 5p piece, maybe 15cm in length) in the finish. I suspect this is oil finding its way in.
- After spraying I sometimes find what I can only describe as "scabs" in the finish. They're smallish (5p piece) bubbly raised areas. Only thing I can think is that it's oil again, but it's a very different result from the above.
- During spraying I struggle between getting enough paint on, and pooling/dripping. I suspect that this is a combination of (over?) thinning the paint, and inexperience.
- After spraying I de-nib with 600 grit. When I focus on problem areas (see pooling/dripping above) I invariably end up overdoing it and taking surrounding areas back to wood (MRMDF). Obviously "be more careful" is a solution, but does anybody have any techniques to help with this?
- After drying, the paint stays (very) slightly tacky. I can leave a fingerprint on it, which will go away within seconds. If I leave a painted item on something, the paint may stick to it and tear off when moved. Leaving two painted things touching each other will bond them fairly tightly, and will definitely result in paint being torn off. This situation doesn't appear to get much better with time. I have some items that have been drying for a week or more, that still have this issue.
- I'm spraying water based acrylic gloss that I thin with water.
- I'm using a compressor and cheap amazon spray gun. Compressor has a pressure regulator which combined with a little twiddly knob on the gun lets me tweak the pressure adequately (I think). I don't have any concerns with the gun, it seems up to the job.
- I have an inline water filter/trap on the gun. This is looking a bit worse for wear, may need replacing.
- I'm spraying outdoors. Bugs are a pita, but not much I can do about that other than move stuff indoors for drying.
- For drying large batches I stack pieces together with craft paper to keep the painted surfaces from touching. Could this be inhibiting further drying/curing?
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