SpacePirateNeko Posted June 11, 2004 Posted June 11, 2004 (edited) Recently i asked people why my airbrush paint was coming on with too much "splatter" effect and they recommended my psi was too high..they were right .. its usually close to 30. The problem is the compressor i use "campbell hausfeld" doesnt have male output connector and my airbrush hose is small one with a female output . So what i have to do is use the big fugly yellow hose that comes with the compressor and then connect the airburhs hose to that . In effect i cant even get paint out with both air and paint levers down unless i go up to around 25-30 psi. I did notice the paint was coming out "ok" when i had it at 25 and was very light on it ...but still not smooth Does anyone know a website i can go to that would have a piece to convert the output to male? Also the airbrush does container a smaller needle and tip ...i started to take it apart ....became distraught with the amount of pieces in the sintructions..i didnt want to break anything its so expensive i just decided to stop where i was and put it back together ( i got about 3 pieces off before i decided to put it back together ) Edited June 11, 2004 by SpacePirateNeko Quote
Checkmate Posted June 11, 2004 Posted June 11, 2004 HAve you tried goint to Wal-Mart? I had the same problem 2 years ago and bought some male connectors from them. the connectors i bought where made by CH also. Quote
tetsujin Posted June 11, 2004 Posted June 11, 2004 (edited) I have a CH compressor, I use the yellow hose, and I normally spray around 15PSI... I guess I can't really say if it sprays as smooth as it ought to, lacking a basis of comparison, but I do alright. Edited June 11, 2004 by tetsujin Quote
Valkyrie Posted June 11, 2004 Posted June 11, 2004 I don't think you've found the root of your problem. If you've got your regulator set to, say, 20 PSI, then as long as that 20 PSI is getting to your airbrush, regardless of the hoses and fittings it has to go through.... then you're golden. I've always used the yellow coil hose on my compressor. I put a quick-disconect fitting on the end, so I can easily swap in my airbrush hose, pressure pot, or anything else I need. I just put those quick-disconect fittings on everything. But if you really want to get rid of the coil hose, just go to a hardware store and get a 1/4" fitting with both ends male. Then you can just screw that into your compressor, and your airbrush hose adapter into the fitting. But in all likelihood, you just need some more time experimenting. Try thinning down your paint more, and see how it works at lower PSI. And make sure your airbrush is thoroughly cleaned. That alone can affect both airflow and paint flow, and contribute to spattering. Personally, I like to stay at around 20 PSI. But it can vary greatly depending on what I'm doing. So just take some time and figure out what works for you. There's no one 'right' way of doing things Quote
SpacePirateNeko Posted June 11, 2004 Author Posted June 11, 2004 i wish i could take a snap shot of the paintjob but i cant find a program that can take snaps with this old camera ( ezcam pro) anyone know a program i can use ) and no they dont even update teh driver or have teh old driver for tha cam anymore Quote
SpacePirateNeko Posted June 11, 2004 Author Posted June 11, 2004 nevermind i can use photoshop ok heres the materials Quote
SpacePirateNeko Posted June 11, 2004 Author Posted June 11, 2004 heres the project xabungle wm walker gallar 2$ ( mandarake i miss you ) Quote
SpacePirateNeko Posted June 11, 2004 Author Posted June 11, 2004 and heres the pieces that have been airbushed already ---pre primed with shadow grey Quote
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