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Airbrush & Compressor Setup....HELP!!!!

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  • Member since
    July 2004
  • From: SETX. USA
Posted by tho9900 on Sunday, July 31, 2005 8:17 PM
RODC - yeah you should have a moisture trap to be safe.. it goes as close to the airbrush as possible, in most cases after the regulator and the airbrush hose connects to it...

You should be ok with the regulator on the compressor from what I know.. (don't have a similar compressor...)

As far as pressures that varies from brush to brush and person to person. Thos are good starting out pressures but if you have problems with orange peel or splattering paint you can adjust how you see ift... (orange peel is helped by lowering the pressure or spraying closer to the model, splattering paint could mean it is not atomizing good and needs higher pressure or more thinning)

In between paints that will be fine... about every 10 hours of spraying I soak my tip and head in laqcuer thinner... needle lube goes a long way to be able to keep paint from adhering to the needle and the resulting dissasembly needed... I wipe mine down maybe once after a long day of painting in most cases...

just do some searches on here for airbrush cleaning and pressures and you should be set! I know MusciCity has some good links on his site for this but I dont have the link on the top of my head... look in some other posts here and find a reply from him.. it's in his sig.. it also has something on pressures too!
---Tom--- O' brave new world, That has such people in it!
  • Member since
    April 2003
  • From: Newfoundland, Canada
Airbrush & Compressor Setup....HELP!!!!
Posted by rodc on Sunday, July 31, 2005 7:40 PM
I just received my Badger 360 and I'm itching to use it for the first time but I have some questions as to the setup.

(1) I have a Porter-Cable pancake compressor that will charge to 180psi. The compressor has a regulator controlling the psi of the airfeed. I understand that I should also have a moisture trap connected between the compressor and the airbrush. Do I also need to have another air regulator in addition to the one on the compressor? If I do, should it go before the moisture trap or after the trap and before the airbrush.

(2) I have also read that most guys spray at about 15-20psi. I just want to make sure that these air pressures are suitable.

(3) Will spraying thinner through the brush after cleaning be sufficient to clean or should I also take it apart and clean as well.

I am a newbie when it comes to airbrushes and so I look to the expertise of my fellow modellers before plunging blindly into an orgy of spray painting for some good advice.

Thanks,

RODC
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