Top 10 Spray Paint Tricks HD
Tricks, Ratschläge, Online, Reparieren, Landwirtschaft, Landwirtschaft Maschine
The top 10 tips when using spray paint.
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I really agree with the fist comment but he did teach something
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What were you printing out? Looking for ideas to find out if one is viable for me..
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this video makes me want to punch some one. mainly the people who think this common sense paint skills are genius.
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#11 spray paint caps are not created equal. we called them chisel caps( makes tight square type pattern as opposed to typical rounded spotty pattern and "fat caps" that throw up large patterns and can empty a can in short order.) We would take caps from other products(small tester paints, workable fixative, glass cleaner etc. much better yet, these can be purchased from graffiti themed businesses.
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I liked no. 7
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Fuck Walmart
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lame so why didn't you use the hair dryer when you put the red on the White
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Totally rad dude.
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This guy reminds me of Ray William Johnson
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great vid. thx for the tips.
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Thank you for sharing the great information! Keep up the great work!
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3:43 banksy
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what did you use at tips no 2 ?
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I have a question, if I sprayed on stencils should I use clear coat? Or wait for it to dry and then use it? And if wanted to add a mask tape on the layer that I already painted before so I can re paint it again how long should I wait for the first layer to dry?
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do you have a video or know of one that helps with making splatter look like blood splatter
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Here are some of my painting tips.
Wipe the nozzle often. Paint tends to collect at the nozzle hole. After a while this build-up of paint can affect the spray jet and cause heavy drops to form resulting in spattering.
Overspray can travel very, very far from your workpiece. Beware of spraying in your home. You may find a dusting of color on surfaces you assumed couldn't possibly have gotten hit with paint. Spraying into a cardboard box can help. An exhaust fan helps.
Warmer and drier climates works much better than colder ones. Beware of painting in a chilly environment. The solvent in the paint will cool your workpiece even more. The workpiece may get cold enough that condensation will start to form on the surface. You may not be able to see the condensation, but this moisture will affect the surface texture and will also create problems with subsequent coats. This problem is particularly troublesome on metal. This is also a problem when someone has just cleaned the surface with acetone. Acetone will chill the metal below the dew point. Acetone may be a great way to dry a surface, but if you don't warm up the workpiece immediately afterward then the cold part will quickly replace all that moisture with condensation from the air.
Heat metal parts to drive out water. A metal workpiece may seem bone dry, but moisture can be absorbed into the surface matrix of metal. I bake metal parts in a toaster oven for 20 minutes. I like them to get to about 300 degrees. Then I let them cool to around 110 to 120 degrees, which is just about too hot to hold. You can also heat with a propane torch.
Some paints work very differently than you expect. Paints dry and cure through a variety of methods. Some solvent borne paints can take 12 to 24 hours to "dry". They usually come with a solvent thin them and allow them to be sprayed, but this solvent will dry in a few minutes. This leaves a layer of chemicals that are still sticky until they cure. They don't "dry" in the sense that most people think. They don't outgas or evaporate any additional chemicals beyond those solvents used for thinning and spraying. The liquid turns into a solid. In that sense they become dry, but they don't "dry out". UV light or oxygen in the air triggers chemical reactions that turn the liquid into a solid. Most of the "paint smell" may be gone from these paints, but they will remain sticky for hours. Air flow will not help these paints to dry faster, but heat can speed the cure time. Another problem when dealing with these types of paints is that some surfaces can slow or even totally inhibit curing of the paint. The paint may never dry! Usually this happens when the workpiece is made of certain types of plastic or rubber. These contain chemicals that react with the paint and block the curing process. A problem is that most consumer paint manufacturers are vague or misleading about exactly what type of chemistry their paint is based on. Marketing terms like "epoxy paint" may mean that the paint simply contains epoxy solids which affect color and surface finish, or it may mean that the paint itself is epoxy based and cures to a solid through an epoxy polymerization process. -
god damn, you are horrible as fuck at editing in music too early, cutting off your own damn words..
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hi :) I have a question
Can I spray paint tiles? -
This foo on crack
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