Itsjustdirt
Well-known member
You know the saying, "practice makes perfect"? Well, I don't have enough money or time to practice anymore...I failed. I failed miserably.
I like perfectly sprayed door casings/trim. I have been using Sherwin Williams ProClassic Alkyd Enamel for the past 3 years and I am absolutely sick of it. I have LITERALLY sprayed 12-15 GALLONS of it and I still have a 50% success rate. The other 50% of the time I have to block sand the runs or block sand the spotty light areas and re-shoot. I find the line between too thick and too thin is razor thin.
I coughed up roughly $700 for a Graco cordless trim gun and purchsed almost every spray tip made for them from 310 all the way up to 515. I have thinned with water, thinned with FLoetrol, I've shot full thickness, I've pre-heated the room (southern california so not really needed), I've pre-heated the trim before spraying, I've even warmed the paint to multiple different temperatures.
I ****. I quit. After spending almost a grand on a gun setup and spraying roughly $600 of paint through it, I still cant get consistent results.





I do LOVE the way the proclassic gloss looks when it comes out correctly. Super smooth. Tough once fully dried.
Does anyone have another suggestion on what I can spray door and window trim with from now on? Maybe something that will even look similar to the proclassic?
I have been able to spray regular ole latex paint without any issues, I've sprayed enamels, two part farm and tractor paint, basically any paint other than pro-classic without issue. I've painted cars, models, houses, etc. before so its not like its my first time holding a spray gun...super frustrating
Here's the gun I bought and have literally shot 12-15 GALLONS of proclassic through, with no improvement in results between the 2nd and 15th gallon. So frustrating.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B071CW2SV2/?tag=atomicindus08-20
I like perfectly sprayed door casings/trim. I have been using Sherwin Williams ProClassic Alkyd Enamel for the past 3 years and I am absolutely sick of it. I have LITERALLY sprayed 12-15 GALLONS of it and I still have a 50% success rate. The other 50% of the time I have to block sand the runs or block sand the spotty light areas and re-shoot. I find the line between too thick and too thin is razor thin.
I coughed up roughly $700 for a Graco cordless trim gun and purchsed almost every spray tip made for them from 310 all the way up to 515. I have thinned with water, thinned with FLoetrol, I've shot full thickness, I've pre-heated the room (southern california so not really needed), I've pre-heated the trim before spraying, I've even warmed the paint to multiple different temperatures.
I ****. I quit. After spending almost a grand on a gun setup and spraying roughly $600 of paint through it, I still cant get consistent results.






I do LOVE the way the proclassic gloss looks when it comes out correctly. Super smooth. Tough once fully dried.
Does anyone have another suggestion on what I can spray door and window trim with from now on? Maybe something that will even look similar to the proclassic?
I have been able to spray regular ole latex paint without any issues, I've sprayed enamels, two part farm and tractor paint, basically any paint other than pro-classic without issue. I've painted cars, models, houses, etc. before so its not like its my first time holding a spray gun...super frustrating
Here's the gun I bought and have literally shot 12-15 GALLONS of proclassic through, with no improvement in results between the 2nd and 15th gallon. So frustrating.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B071CW2SV2/?tag=atomicindus08-20

