| Brand | HomeRight |
|---|---|
| Color | Blue/White |
| Material | Brass |
| Item Weight | 3.1 Pounds |
| Item Dimensions LxWxH | 5 x 9 x 12.5 inches |
| Style | Finish Max |
| Power Source | AC/DC |
| Included Components | Finish Max, 27 oz. Viscosity Cup, Air Blow Nozzle, Cleaning Brush |
| Model Name | Finish Max |
| Manufacturer | Home Right |
| Part Number | C800766 |
| Item Weight | 3.1 pounds |
| Product Dimensions | 5 x 9 x 12.5 inches |
| Country of Origin | China |
| Item model number | C800766 |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
| Size | Finish Max |
| Finish | Eggshell |
| Pattern | Sprayer |
| Item Package Quantity | 1 |
| Coverage | 8" spray pattern |
| Usage | Interior/Exterior |
| Batteries Included? | No |
| Batteries Required? | No |
| Warranty Description | 2-year limited warranty |
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- COVERAGE: Plan starts on the date of purchase. Drops, spills and cracked screens due to normal use covered for portable products and power surges covered from day one. Malfunctions covered after the manufacturer's warranty.
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- MORE DETAILS: Additional information about this protection plan is available within the “Product guides and documents” section. Simply click “User Guide” for more info. Asurion will also email your plan confirmation with Terms & Conditions to the address associated with your Amazon account within 24 hours of purchase (if you do not see this email, please check your spam folder). Contact us if you cannot locate your plan confirmation and Terms & Conditions via email at AmazonFeedback@Asurion.com.
- NO ADDITIONAL COST: You pay $0 for repairs – parts, labor and shipping included.
- COVERAGE: Plan starts on the date of purchase. Drops, spills and cracked screens due to normal use covered for portable products and power surges covered from day one. Malfunctions covered after the manufacturer's warranty.
- EASY CLAIMS PROCESS: File a claim anytime online at www.Asurion.com/Amazon or by phone. Most claims approved within minutes. We will send you an Amazon e-gift card for the purchase price of your covered product. In some cases, we will replace or repair it.
- MORE DETAILS: Additional information about this protection plan is available within the “Product guides and documents” section. Simply click “User Guide” for more info. Asurion will also email your plan confirmation with Terms & Conditions to the address associated with your Amazon account within 24 hours of purchase (if you do not see this email, please check your spam folder). Contact us if you cannot locate your plan confirmation and Terms & Conditions via email at AmazonFeedback@Asurion.com.
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HomeRight C800766, C900076 HomeRight Finish Max Paint Sprayer HVLP Electric Spray Gun, 1 Nozzle Sprays All, Superior Brass Spray Tip, 3 Spray Patterns
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Enhance your purchase
| Brand | HomeRight |
| Color | Blue/White |
| Material | Brass |
| Item Weight | 3.1 Pounds |
| Item Dimensions LxWxH | 5 x 9 x 12.5 inches |
About this item
- Make sure this fits by entering your model number.
- BETTER THAN A BRUSH OR SPRAY CAN: The HomeRight Finish Max paint sprayer is an easy-to-use electric paint sprayer that applies a smooth finish without brush marks. It’s the best paint sprayer option for painting furniture, cabinets, trim, and more
- ADJUSTABLE SETTINGS, EASY TO USE: You can adjust the air cap to spray horizontal, vertical, and round. You can also adjust the material flow control knob to quickly increase or decrease the material output
- SPRAY A VARIETY OF MATERIALS: Spray a variety of materials such as thinned chalk type paint, milk paint, latex paints, enamels, primers, clear sealer, polyurethane, stain and varnish. It also comes with a viscosity cup to easily measure paint thickness
- BRASS SPRAY TIP TECHNOLOGY: The HomeRight Finish Max paint sprayer uses a 2 mm. precision brass spray tip and nozzle, which provide superior performance over plastic counterparts
- U.S. BASED CUSTOMER SERVICE AND 2 YEAR WARRANTY: Please call or chat with our U.S based customer service team for quick and efficient assistance. We’re proud of our products, which is why the Finish Max is backed by a 2 year warranty
Customer ratings by feature
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What's in the box
From the manufacturer
Features
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|---|---|---|
Lightweight DesignThe Finish Max is our lightest sprayer and fits comfortably in the user’s hand, reducing fatigue and increasing maneuverability around projects. |
Superior FinishWith 400 watts of power, the Finish Max sets a benchmark for powerful HVLP sprayers. The Finish Max provides a precise spray pattern, creating a fine, factory-like finish. |
Flow ControlRegulate your paint output by adjusting the flow control knob on the Finish Max paint sprayer. The Finish Max has more output and more pressure, making it a champion sprayer for DIY projects. |
Features
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|---|---|---|
Seals and Splash GuardThe Finish Max’s tight seal allows air to flow into the pressurized cup, and the foam splash guard prevents paint from back flowing into the nozzle area, providing a super seal that prevents leaking. |
Simplified DesignThe Finish Max has a simplified design and less parts, making clean-up even easier for beginners. |
Always Available with AnswersU.S. based customer department is available by phone and email to answer any product question you may have. |
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Product Description
The HomeRight Finish Max paint sprayer is great for beginners and experts alike when painting and refinishing furniture, kitchen cabinets, trim, and more! This versatile sprayer applies a smooth finish and can be used with thinned chalk and milk paint, latex paints, enamels, primers, clear sealer, polyurethane, stain and varnish. The Finish Max uses High Volume, Low Pressure (HVLP) technology and it has a turbine motor, which means that a separate air compressor isn’t needed! The Finish Max has three adjustable spray patterns (horizontal, vertical, round) and an adjustable flow control knob for more project versatility. Plus it can hold 27 ounces of paint, which means less refilling when working on larger projects. The unit is lightweight at only 2. 76 lbs, which reduces hand fatigue when painting or staining projects. The Finish Max comes with an air nozzle, cleaning brush, and viscosity cup.
Product information
Technical Details
Additional Information
| ASIN | B003VKFDEO |
|---|---|
| Customer Reviews |
4.3 out of 5 stars |
| Best Sellers Rank | #1,735 in Tools & Home Improvement (See Top 100 in Tools & Home Improvement) #1 in Power Paint & HVLP Sprayers |
| Domestic Shipping | Item can be shipped within U.S. |
| International Shipping | This item can be shipped to select countries outside of the U.S. Learn More |
| Date First Available | July 12, 2010 |
Warranty & Support
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Customer Review: A fair sprayer but has some maintenance
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Customer reviews
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonReviewed in the United States on February 21, 2022
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The stain I used was the Sherwin Williams Woodscapes acrylic stain. I used the dark opaque base stain that was tinted to the desired color (a Navajo red-like color). This is a self-priming stain that is moderately viscous and designed for siding. It has some mold and mildew resistance built in. I greatly appreciated the self-priming nature of the stain, because it meant that I did not need to apply a primer, let it dry, and then apply the stain, so it saved a lot of time. The stain was also a great thickness that was easy to apply and gave great coverage and penetration with a brush in the places where using a brush, not the sprayer, was simpler or more practical. When using the sprayer the stain also went on well, penetrated the numerous cracks & grooves in the siding, and gave good coverage. I highly recommend this stain for these types of projects. It's a great product-at least after 3-months. I'll update my review if this changes in a year.
On to the "HomeRight C800971.A Super Finish Max Extra Power Painter, Home Sprayer Hvlp Spray Gun for Painting Projects"! I boght the somewhat more expensive "extra power" version of this sprayer for 2 reasons. First, I knew I would be using a stain with a moderate viscosity and I was concerned that the "regular power" version of this sprayer, might not be able to manage the viscosity of the stain I was going to use. And second, this sprayer had a wider range of droplet sizes to which it could be adjusted. I'm glad I spent the extra $30 for the "extra power" version. This sprayer allows the user to choose between 3 included color-coded tips that provide flexibility beyond the droplet size "adjustment dial" built into the sprayer. The combination of tip selection and the "adjustmetnt dial" allows the user to use a essentially any common paint or stain and to produce different spray patterns and droplet size to adjust the quality of the finish. If the three included tips don't provide you with the desired finish, you can buy a kit that includes 3 additional tips (Homeright C900110 Spray Tip Multi Pack for Super Finish Max (Orange, Yellow, Black)) . I used the red tip designed to give a courser finish, but quicker application. I think one of the tips designed to provide a "finer" finish would likely have stuggled to use this stain, but I did not test them with the stain. The first day I applied 3.5-4 gallons of stain to finish the outside of the cabin. I had to refill the reservoir on the sprayer 15 or 16 times to complete the task and applying the stain took about 4-hours, so a full reservoir is good for about 10-15 minutes of spraying-including brief pauses to move the ladder, adjust my grip, or change the spray pattern and longer breaks to occasionally clean the tip assembly. The reservoir is easy to refill, so I was fine with the sprayer's limited volume. If you have a bigger job or are in more of a hurry, I suggest going with a higher capacity sprayer with a hose that you insert directly into the 5-gallon container of stain/paint. I regularly changed the spray pattern from a horizontal line to a veritcal line (a circular pattern is the third option avaiable) depending on the orientation of the surface I was staining-switching between spray patterns only took a few seconds. I needed to stop after each 5-6 fills of the reservoir to partially disassemble the tip assembly on the sprayer and clear it when it became clogged with drying stain. This process took ~5 minutes each time, but most sparyers require periodic clearing of the tip during use, so this was not a problem for me for this project. Gradul plugging of the tip also required that I periodically increased the droplet size and courseness of the finish by rotating the "adjustment dial" in order to keep working. Again, this was not a problem for this project., but may be a problem for larger projects. Cleaning the sprayer after the days work took me more than an hour, but I only had cold water form a hand pump (no, the cabin does not have indoor plumbing, but it does have electricity!) to clean the sprayer parts and to clean out the reservoir. Cleaning would have been much faster if I had access to an unlimited supply of warm soapy water. It is eesential to thoroughly clean the internal parts of the sprayer after each use to prevent problems in the future. If you are planning to change colors of paint or stain frequently, be sure to allow time for cleaning the sprayer for each change.
The next weekend I spent the second day staining the shed and the smaller wooden pieces. These pieces were again pretty old and the wood well cracked from drying. I used 2-2.5 gallons for these projects. Pretty much everything I said above was true for this day also, however, these types of smaller projects are really what this sprayer is designed for. It worked superbly. I had to stop once to clear the red tip after the 5th fill of the reservoir. Clean-up was still a time-consuming step, but well worth the time saving of using a brush or roller.
Other comments:
1. Overspray was not a significant problem with this sprayer. Just don't spray on a super windy day. You still must tape or cover any surfaces (like windows) that you don't want paint/stain droplets on and wear appropriate personal protective equipment-especially to protect your eyes and respiratory tract.
2. Be sure to wear proper personal protective equipment when using ANY sprayer. For me, this included a hat (kept the spray out of my hair and parts of my head), safety glasses (when I looked at mine during the work I saw tiny droplets of stain on them,so I was glad to have the safety glasses), and a respirator that covers your nose and mouth. A cheap paper dust mask does NOT provide adequate protection from the fine mist produced by a sprayer. Spend $25-30 to get a decent respirator with replaceable cartridges. Your nose, mouth and lungs will appreciate it! You could add gloves and a long-sleeve shirt if desired. I skipped the gloves and shirt and got some wind-blown spray on my hands, but less on my arms. Both my hands and arms cleaned up pretty quickly-even with just cold water. I suggest safety glasses like these (https://www.amazon.com/Pyramex-Fortress-Safety-Eyewear-Clear/dp/B003UY9C0C/ref=sr_1_32?s=hi&ie=UTF8&qid=1533890807&sr=1-32&keywords=safety+glasses) that don't easily fog up and a respirator like this (https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0009F5KDS/ref=twister_B01MUGE5FK?_encoding=UTF8&psc=1).
3. It is ESSENTIAL that you properly prepare the surface before applying the stain/paint. Failing to prepare the surface properly will give you poor results, REGARDLESS of the paint/stain you use and regardless of whether you use a sprayer, brush, or roller. You will likely spend at least as much time preparing the surface as applying the stain/paint, so plan accordingly. For this project, I used a scrub broom to knock down cobwebs, spider egg cases, etc. I then scrubbed the wooden surfaces with bleach water (using a deck wash or borax would also work), then rinsed the surfaces with plain water, and finally let the surface dry for a few days. I couldn't use a pressure washer, because I didn't have access to pressurized water, but that would have saved time. There were several pieces of siding that had areas where dry rot, insects, or lichens had decayed the wood under the old stain. I removed as much of these "spungy" areas as possible with the scrub prush and for particularly bad areas a wood chisel and had to replace some of the siding boards completely. The prep took a lot of time, but I cannot emphasize how important it is to apply stain/paint to clean, dry, decay-free surface. As mentioned above, skipping the prep step will give you poor results including stain/paint coming up within weeks, months, or possibly a year.
4. The sprayer is pretty light weight, so almost anyone can use it.
5. One negative with the sprayer is the small wrench they provide to install and remove the 2 metal parts of each tip. In a word, the wrench sucks. It's too small to provide much leverage (which does prevent you from over-tightening the two pieces of the tip when you're installing the tips) and it "stripped" out pretty quickly making it useless for removing the tips once a lttle stain/paint had started to dry in the tip. I quickly resorted to using a pair of wrenches with a longer handle to loosen the tip pieces.
Summary: I pushed the limits of this sprayer with this project, but so far the results are fantastic. Cleaning the sprayer is a bit of a pain, but the prep work is the same regardless of whether you use a brush, roller, or sprayer. In less than 2 afternoons I stained an area that would probably have taken 4 or 5 full days to do with a brush and the brush would probably not have provided as good of coverage. I expect that completing smaller projects with this sprayer could give great finishes. I highly recommend this sprayer (and the stain).
1. Buy two extra containers. It's handy when you are painting a room, and you may have two colors for the room or the trim, or primer and paint, but instead of emptying them, and cleaning them, you can just put a lid on them and screw them back on the sprayer - just make sure to stir/shake. The third container is to use when you are cleaning the sprayer (more on that later).
2. Yes, you do have to screw on a full container of paint on to the sprayer - it's awkward, and I always was afraid that I'd drop it, but I didn't. I suppose that you could put the container on a surface and spin the sprayer around on top - the cord is very short, so that is possible, but seemed more awkward to me, so I lift the container up to the sprayer and turn it to secure.
3. You don't need a viscosity cup, but you do need to buy good paint. This model claims that you don't have to thin the paint. I didn't - I bought Benjamin Moore primer and paint. I got good coverage with the paint using the larger (red) nozzle. I had to experiment on how to hold it and the flow. Ceiling paint is made to be thicker to avoid drips, so I was nervous about that. I did find that it was "spitting" instead of spraying. I made sure that the intake valve was on tight - but it did not resolve it. I ended up dry-rolling the paint after I sprayed it so it wouldn't look like texture. I think it was worth it. So far, I've used the BM Fresh Start Primer, Ceiling, Aura Bath and Spa, and an old gallon of Pratt and Lambert Redseal, and they have all sprayed very well.
4. Make sure that you tape down any drop cloths or plastic covering items that you don't want painted. The sprayer creates a blowing that will move even a heavy drop cloth when you get near to it. I laid a drop cloth in a closet to protect the floors, but when I got near the baseboards, the sprayer would blow the drop cloth away. It's pretty powerful
5. I bought the fast cleaner kit, but I failed to realize that our kitchen faucet has a sprayer head, so it won't work with it. It will have to wait until we have garden hose weather.
6. Get a good face mask. You *will* breath in the fine particles, and that is really bad for you. A bandana or a cloth mask doesn't cut it. I started out wearing an N95 that I have due to the pandemic, but I switched to this: https://smile.amazon.com/gp/product/B0915XFDN5/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_asin_title_o03_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1 when it arrived.
7. Speaking of the dust - yes, there's overspray, and yes, it's more than you would think. I mentioned that I sprayed a closet, and I had laid a drop cloth. When I sprayed over the door frame, the door was open. I found paint spray 5-6' away. Also, when I finally sprayed color on the walls - I had cut in the edges, thinking that I could spray within the edges - not possible. The overspray sprayed on my nicely painted ceiling. I don't know how professional painters do this - my husband works in the trades, and he says that all the painters he sees still roll everything. Well, it's true that with rolling you have more control, but it definitely takes longer. I guess you could do your ceilings last and tape and drape 1-2' of your walls, that's how much you'd need for the overspray.
8. You can do ceilings - I wasn't sure how this would work since the directions very specifically tell you to keep the sprayer parallel to the wall at all times. So, that would mean tipping it on it's side to do a ceiling, that's exactly what you do. Point the intake tub to the back of the sprayer so that when the container is on, and it's pointed upwards, it will be pulling from the paint that has moved there.
Ok, here's the review part:
Overall, I like it, and I will use it a lot. I'm already excited about painting some other rooms and hallways in the house. The price is fantastic. You can't get a painter to show up for $100. Is it better than brushing and rolling? For some things, yes. But, there's a lot of the same work if you were brushing or rolling (some would say more).
One of the things that I hate about painting is all the waste. So much paint down the drain as you clean brushes, rollers, paint trays. Well, it's not too much different with the sprayer. You have to empty and clean the container (if you are going to save the paint in it, make sure to wipe around the threads so that the cover doesn't stick), you have to clean the sprayer and it's parts, and you have to clean any other miscellaneous brushes or painting paraphernalia that you still use. I think the sprayer is a little less wasteful, if that's all you have to use, but I found with painting a room, I still needed a brush and a roller and a edge pad and a roller tray - so, in some ways the waste was double.
But, that brings me to the use of paint by the sprayer. I was warned that the sprayer uses more paint. I can't say that has been my experience. I got paint for my bathroom ceiling, the guy said that I should be able to do it with a quart. I put the whole quart into the sprayer, but ended up with a quarter of it left. I did use 1.5 gallons of primer on 2 closets and a bathroom (including ceilings - we are doing a renovation, so it was new sheetrock). I think that seems reasonable. I also wonder - if you feel you have to thin the paint, aren't you going to get more out of gallon? Anyway, time will tell, and I'll try to update this if I feel like it's a real paint hog.
You still have to do all the prep. Thoroughly clean any surface that you're painting, and you'll want to tape/protect areas from overspray, you'll still have to cut in and around edges. It doesn't eliminate that.
So far with my experiences, I feel that the sprayer really excels on trim and doors. I sprayed a door using BM Advance, and the finish looks like it was done in a factory. I know that it's 85% the paint, but the sprayer gives it a sheen, and no brush strokes! I also painted some indoor shutters, and there's really no other way to paint shutters than with a spray gun - so much easier with better result.
I am very happy that I purchased this. It has already returned the investment 100%, and I will use it many times and recommend it to my friends and family.
By Lynne on February 21, 2022
1. Buy two extra containers. It's handy when you are painting a room, and you may have two colors for the room or the trim, or primer and paint, but instead of emptying them, and cleaning them, you can just put a lid on them and screw them back on the sprayer - just make sure to stir/shake. The third container is to use when you are cleaning the sprayer (more on that later).
2. Yes, you do have to screw on a full container of paint on to the sprayer - it's awkward, and I always was afraid that I'd drop it, but I didn't. I suppose that you could put the container on a surface and spin the sprayer around on top - the cord is very short, so that is possible, but seemed more awkward to me, so I lift the container up to the sprayer and turn it to secure.
3. You don't need a viscosity cup, but you do need to buy good paint. This model claims that you don't have to thin the paint. I didn't - I bought Benjamin Moore primer and paint. I got good coverage with the paint using the larger (red) nozzle. I had to experiment on how to hold it and the flow. Ceiling paint is made to be thicker to avoid drips, so I was nervous about that. I did find that it was "spitting" instead of spraying. I made sure that the intake valve was on tight - but it did not resolve it. I ended up dry-rolling the paint after I sprayed it so it wouldn't look like texture. I think it was worth it. So far, I've used the BM Fresh Start Primer, Ceiling, Aura Bath and Spa, and an old gallon of Pratt and Lambert Redseal, and they have all sprayed very well.
4. Make sure that you tape down any drop cloths or plastic covering items that you don't want painted. The sprayer creates a blowing that will move even a heavy drop cloth when you get near to it. I laid a drop cloth in a closet to protect the floors, but when I got near the baseboards, the sprayer would blow the drop cloth away. It's pretty powerful
5. I bought the fast cleaner kit, but I failed to realize that our kitchen faucet has a sprayer head, so it won't work with it. It will have to wait until we have garden hose weather.
6. Get a good face mask. You *will* breath in the fine particles, and that is really bad for you. A bandana or a cloth mask doesn't cut it. I started out wearing an N95 that I have due to the pandemic, but I switched to this: https://smile.amazon.com/gp/product/B0915XFDN5/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_asin_title_o03_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1 when it arrived.
7. Speaking of the dust - yes, there's overspray, and yes, it's more than you would think. I mentioned that I sprayed a closet, and I had laid a drop cloth. When I sprayed over the door frame, the door was open. I found paint spray 5-6' away. Also, when I finally sprayed color on the walls - I had cut in the edges, thinking that I could spray within the edges - not possible. The overspray sprayed on my nicely painted ceiling. I don't know how professional painters do this - my husband works in the trades, and he says that all the painters he sees still roll everything. Well, it's true that with rolling you have more control, but it definitely takes longer. I guess you could do your ceilings last and tape and drape 1-2' of your walls, that's how much you'd need for the overspray.
8. You can do ceilings - I wasn't sure how this would work since the directions very specifically tell you to keep the sprayer parallel to the wall at all times. So, that would mean tipping it on it's side to do a ceiling, that's exactly what you do. Point the intake tub to the back of the sprayer so that when the container is on, and it's pointed upwards, it will be pulling from the paint that has moved there.
Ok, here's the review part:
Overall, I like it, and I will use it a lot. I'm already excited about painting some other rooms and hallways in the house. The price is fantastic. You can't get a painter to show up for $100. Is it better than brushing and rolling? For some things, yes. But, there's a lot of the same work if you were brushing or rolling (some would say more).
One of the things that I hate about painting is all the waste. So much paint down the drain as you clean brushes, rollers, paint trays. Well, it's not too much different with the sprayer. You have to empty and clean the container (if you are going to save the paint in it, make sure to wipe around the threads so that the cover doesn't stick), you have to clean the sprayer and it's parts, and you have to clean any other miscellaneous brushes or painting paraphernalia that you still use. I think the sprayer is a little less wasteful, if that's all you have to use, but I found with painting a room, I still needed a brush and a roller and a edge pad and a roller tray - so, in some ways the waste was double.
But, that brings me to the use of paint by the sprayer. I was warned that the sprayer uses more paint. I can't say that has been my experience. I got paint for my bathroom ceiling, the guy said that I should be able to do it with a quart. I put the whole quart into the sprayer, but ended up with a quarter of it left. I did use 1.5 gallons of primer on 2 closets and a bathroom (including ceilings - we are doing a renovation, so it was new sheetrock). I think that seems reasonable. I also wonder - if you feel you have to thin the paint, aren't you going to get more out of gallon? Anyway, time will tell, and I'll try to update this if I feel like it's a real paint hog.
You still have to do all the prep. Thoroughly clean any surface that you're painting, and you'll want to tape/protect areas from overspray, you'll still have to cut in and around edges. It doesn't eliminate that.
So far with my experiences, I feel that the sprayer really excels on trim and doors. I sprayed a door using BM Advance, and the finish looks like it was done in a factory. I know that it's 85% the paint, but the sprayer gives it a sheen, and no brush strokes! I also painted some indoor shutters, and there's really no other way to paint shutters than with a spray gun - so much easier with better result.
I am very happy that I purchased this. It has already returned the investment 100%, and I will use it many times and recommend it to my friends and family.
Top reviews from other countries
The biggest problem is - she was right.
I have a large fence that should have been stained a while ago, but wasn't. After spending way longer than expected to clean/prep it, I wasn't looking forward to hours of spraying, but I loaded up the HomeRight thingy and got started. Holy cow - it was fast. I managed to get the whole fence done in an hour or so, and it looks fantastic.
I ordered the cleaning kit, despite some folks giving it a negative review. it was fine - but you might get a bit wet. Everything comes apart nicely and cleans up good as new.
Bottom line - really happy with this sprayer, other than the fact that my wife is walking around with an 'i told ya so' grin, all.day.long.
After using it for a while, I concluded a couple of tricks to use it: 1. thin the paint according to the manual instruction. 2. prepare a wet paper towel or rug to wipe the nozzle when you see dry paint starts to build up there. You can screw off the plastic rings and wipe the metal part (you'll know what I am talking about once you see the sprayer, it's fairy easy and quick) 3. strain the paint before putting it into the canister. This is important, because you never know what's in the paint; the paint would not come out of the nozzle if it gets stuck by chunky stuffs in the paint.
Hope you find this review helpful. Whoever's reading this, gook luck with your project :)
Reviewed in Canada 🇨🇦 on July 9, 2017
After using it for a while, I concluded a couple of tricks to use it: 1. thin the paint according to the manual instruction. 2. prepare a wet paper towel or rug to wipe the nozzle when you see dry paint starts to build up there. You can screw off the plastic rings and wipe the metal part (you'll know what I am talking about once you see the sprayer, it's fairy easy and quick) 3. strain the paint before putting it into the canister. This is important, because you never know what's in the paint; the paint would not come out of the nozzle if it gets stuck by chunky stuffs in the paint.
Hope you find this review helpful. Whoever's reading this, gook luck with your project :)
Reviewed in Canada 🇨🇦 on May 6, 2018
Reviewed in Canada 🇨🇦 on February 26, 2020

































