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Iwata HP-CS technical and maintenance problems

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  • Member since
    January 2006
Posted by Paul Budzik on Sunday, February 26, 2017 9:47 PM

You also need to be careful about how hard you seat the needle ... This is how I maintain my airbrushes ...

 

Paul

Paul

  • Member since
    February 2017
Posted by The Wargamer on Thursday, February 23, 2017 9:44 PM

Don, thanks for the reply

Looks like I'll be picking up a new nozzle then.. I'll try the toothpick again but really didn't have much luck with them the first time ive used them.

I clean my airbrush in exactly as you said everytime I change paints.. So maybe it's coming from using a brush to mix paint in the paint cup.

  • Member since
    October 2008
  • From: Fullerton, Calif.
Posted by Don Wheeler on Thursday, February 23, 2017 11:48 AM

I think you will find that a new nozzle will make your CS spray much better.  Yes, you've trashed it.  I know that some people use an old needle to clean their nozzles, but I would never stick anything metal in there.  The tip is very thin metal and really easy to damage, especially when .35mm or smaller.  A shaved down toothpick used gently is much safer.  I doubt whether the CS nozzle is any more fragile than other airbrushes.

The drag on your needle could be due to a build-up of paint in the channel behind the cup.  Have a look at this page for an illustration.  Get some interdental brushes and swab it out.  I would use lacquer thinner or acetone.

If you clean your airbrush right after you use it, you shouldn't have dried paint inside.  You don't have to tear it completely apart to do it.  Just flush and swab the areas that paint hits and wipe the needle.  The HP-CS is very easy to clean.

The sticky trigger is common in Iwatas.  There is a rubber O-ring inside the body that the trigger passes through.  Iwata recommends applying a little of their lube when it sticks.  You need to pull the trigger to do this. Hopefully there is no paint back in this area.  I wouldn't mess with the air valve unless you really have to.  This page may be of some help.

Don

https://sites.google.com/site/donsairbrushtips/home

A collection of airbrush tips and reviews

Also an Amazon E-book and paperback of tips.

  • Member since
    February 2017
Iwata HP-CS technical and maintenance problems
Posted by The Wargamer on Wednesday, February 22, 2017 7:50 PM

Hello all,

I'm having a little bit of trouble with my HP-CS. I think ultimately I'm going to have to get a new nozzle.. so I guess I'm more asking what I can do to keep from breaking the next one. The very tip of my nozzle that's the threaded portion is starting to lose structrual integrity pretty badly. I think partially from popping it out from getting stuck in the nozzle cap..  It's also gotten pretty bent up from pushing dried paint out the tip (i normally use an old .2mm needle I had lying around from my masters airbrush as it's much smaller than the .35mm nozzle). I think I need to completely dissasemble the whole thing as well.. the needle will sometimes move through the airbrush body with a bit of resistance. My trigger starts to get sticky every once in a while as well.

If I do end up having dry paint and clogs in my airbrush nozzle what is the best way to clean that out? Is the metal on all the HP-CS nozzle tips that soft or did I just have a bad nozzle? It seems to bend VERY easily.

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