Oxford Premium Spray Lacquer

Farrell mfarrel2@tampabay.rr.com
Fri, 7 Sep 2001 08:01:38 -0400


Well Mark, these couple posts have gotten me thinking that I need to get my
gun (spray) out and take another stab at shooting something (if it doesn't
work, maybe I'll take my 12-guage to it!). What kind of pressure are you
running AT THE GUN? I would love to figure out a way to eliminate or
drastically reduce the orange peel.

When I wrote before that I had finally found sucess, I was referring to
rubbing out a finish on that did not have witness lines. The orange peel can
be sanded out, but man, that is a lot of work, and you always have the risk
(reality) of sanding through in spots.

Question for Greg and Mark. When spraying a piano lid, do you hang the lid
vertically and spray both sides at once, or do you lay it horizontal and
spray one side at a time. If you lay it horizontal, how long do you wait
before flipping it over? If horizontal, do you put all your coats on one
side, and then start coating the other side? Thanks.

Terry Farrell

----- Original Message -----
From: <bases-loaded@juno.com>
To: <pianotech@ptg.org>
Sent: Friday, September 07, 2001 7:28 AM
Subject: Re: Oxford Premium Spray Lacquer


Hi Greg -

I use an Accuspray conversion gun (HVLP, but runs from a compressor), and
have been using a .036 needle/nozzle set with a #7 air cap.  Little or no
orange peel.

Mark Potter
bases-loaded@juno.com


On Thu, 06 Sep 2001 22:51:02 -0400 Greg Newell <gnewell@ameritech.net>
writes:
> Greetings fellow listees,
>     I'd like to relate an experience I've been having for far too
> long.
> I've been trying to refinish a piano and As Terry Farrell
> experienced
> too, there was a great deal of orange peel. Finally I have found the
> correct solution (for me).
>     It seems that I was using the needle, nozzle and air cap that
> came
> with my Accuspray turbine and gun unit. I was assured that this was
> what
> i needed for the task I was trying to perform. I just recently, on
> the
> advice of a different salesman who's company also sells these units,
> changed all three parts to near the smallest orifice parts made for
> this
> gun. It seems that water based lacquer has very small solids or
> something like that. Anyway it worked like a charm. I have been
> trying
> to achieve a solution based on other things like too high a
> temperature
> and adding retarder, too fast a delivery, too slow a delivery,
> product
> too thick (that one didn't seem right) and a host of other worries
> involving spray conditions. The new gun parts changed everything and
> all
> things are now as they should be.
>     I write this only to give a "heads up" to others who may be
> spraying
> water based for the first time. It seems a very high atomization
> rate is
> in order. Straighten that out before you begin and you will have
> saved
> yourself a great deal of time, believe me! Oh! and don't use steel
> wool
> with water based products either. Go ahead, ask me how I know.
>
> Best,
> Greg
>
> --
> Greg Newell
> Greg's Piano Forté
> 12970 Harlon Ave.
> Lakewood, Ohio 44107
> 216-226-3791
> mailto:gnewell@ameritech.net
>
>
>




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