Pistolas de pulverización Sharpe Automotive

Sharpe Automotive Spray Guns

Sharpe automotive spray guns come in a variety of models, each kit of which uses a different specialized delivery method. These convenient Sharpe tools supply liquid paint through the nozzle of the gun in an aerated spray that makes it both simple and efficient to cover large surfaces smoothly and evenly. Professional mechanics and auto enthusiasts can benefit by having a Sharpe air spray gun that they can use to quickly and easily give touch-ups or completely repaint a car with a flawless surface.

What do automotive spray guns do?

Sharpe spray guns are specialized pieces of painting equipment that give users the ability to get a uniform and smooth paint job across the curved surfaces of a car. Paint guns are capable of producing high-quality painted surfaces as compared to other painting methods. Problems arise when people try to use spray guns without understanding the proper procedure, which can lead to substandard painting and subsequent dissatisfaction by the user. It is important to maintain the equipment and use it properly in order to maximize the efficiency of the paint gun and the quality of the job.

What kinds of spray guns are there?

There are four basic types of spray guns. The main difference between them is the method by which the spray is produced and expelled from the body of the gun. The different types are each effective to a different degree, represented by how much of the contents end up on the target, as opposed to how much ends up in the air or on the floor.

  • Pressure guns: This type of air spray gun keeps the liquid paint at a high pressure, which then forces it out of the gun at high velocity. This is a simple design, which does not require a separate source of compressed air to run the mechanism, as the contents are already under compression forces and only need to be given an outlet to escape at high speeds.
  • Siphon: Unlike pressure models, the siphon model of the air spray gun uses a suction effect caused by high-velocity air flowing through the gun to pull the paint out of the reservoir attached to the main body of the paint gun. This design relies on an outside suction force to expel the fluid at high speed, and as such does not require that the contents be kept pressurized in order to function properly.
  • Gravity-fed: Similar to the above design, the gravity-fed model uses an air stream as a means of delivery, but instead of relying on a suction force to pull out of the reservoir, gravity-fed spray guns use gravity to do the job.
  • HVLP: Standing for High Volume Low Pressure, HVLP spray guns come in two varieties: siphon models and gravity-fed models. The major difference between an HVLP spray gun and the other two designs that are not based on HVLP concepts is that the HVLP is designed to work at low pressure, sometimes as low as 10 psi when measured at the nozzle, while still being able to function very efficiently.