Can anyone out there comment on the suitability of using a Krause & Becker 5/8 hp Airless Paint Sprayer Kit for spraying my t-craft project. Harbor Freight has great 4th of July Sale.
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Painting T-craft project
Collapse
X
-
Re: Painting T-craft project
I used a Harbor Freight HVLP to paint my plane and it worked great. It wasn't the Krause & Becker (much older than that one) but the only thing you need to watch is the viscosity of the paint and make sure you have the right tip.
Best thing was the NO OVERSPRAY it produced (or doesn't produce). After the first wing I didn't even move my car from next to the hangar doors. I did park it on the up wind side, but there was NO OVERSPRAY in the hangar. The fumes were also MUCH lower than from a regular small jam gun. Your paint will go a LOT further too. I have LOTS of left over Taylorcraft Ivory dope.
Hank
-
Re: Painting T-craft project
Originally posted by Leenicklas View PostCan anyone out there comment on the suitability of using a Krause & Becker 5/8 hp Airless Paint Sprayer Kit for spraying my t-craft project. Harbor Freight has great 4th of July Sale.
I have seen airless rigs advertised for use with PolyFiber paints. I forget the price, but they are turbine powered HVLP sprayers. If you go to polyfiber.com and look on the left side, there is a link to spray equipment. You can use a regular HVLP spray gun with a small air compressor too.
If you elect to use the inexpensive airless rig from Harbor Freight, I would certainly practice on something disposable before using on your plane.Richard Pearson
N43381
Fort Worth, Texas
Comment
-
Re: Painting T-craft project
The one I used was NOT an airless. It was an HVLP with a built in turbine. Sounded like a vacuum cleaner when you used it and worked great with Dope. You DID have to be totally anal about cleaning it. If you left any dope at all to dry in it it would jam up and quit.
There is one on eBay at
Looks just like mine except mine is red.
Hank
Comment
-
Re: Painting T-craft project
I use a turbine powered HVLP spray rig. The brushes in the turbine motor gave out a month or so ago right in the middle of a spray job. I hooked it up the the exhaust on my Black and Decker shop vac and finished the spray job!!John 3728T
Comment
-
Re: Painting T-craft project
Lee,
I don't know if it is of any use to you or not.
But, as I take apart my airplane in the re-covering process, I am compiling a list of every piece of hardware that I take off of the airplane.
I have a spreadsheet with every fastener that I have touched. It is incomplete because I haven't finished taking the fuse apart yet. But I'm in the middle of that right now.
And I cannot know if what is on my '46 BC-12D airplane is what you will need for your airplane. But I'm willing to make the spreadsheet available to you or to anyone who thinks that it might be useful.
TimTim Hicks
N96872
Comment
-
Re: Painting T-craft project
I think it would be VERY useful. I would use it with an extra column for the size fastener I found in my planes as I work them. I think if you compared planes you would find a variance in lengths from plane to plane since I often find one dash number difference from left to right on mine. With a good list and updates from other planes we would at least know where the variance was and be able to order extra bolts where everyone wasn't the same.
Hank
Comment
-
Re: Painting T-craft project
That would be very helpful. Can you send it as an attachment to an Email? my email is [email protected] Thanks for your help.
Comment
-
Re: Painting T-craft project
Lee,
Yes it's easy for me to send it as an attachment to an email.
I'll send it to you in the next couple of days.
For the Forum, I'll start a new thread and try to attach my spreadsheet.
A couple of Caveats.
I'm not an A&P. I may identify things by unconventional names. I started this as just a shopping list for myself, not as a reference for all.
The list is incomplete as I'm the process of compiling it. But I assume that I'll post later updates as I get further along in the process.
My airplane is a 46 BC-12D but it has pre-war 13-rib (built-up) wings and pre-war horizontal stab/elevator.
In some cases, there was ambiguity, So I might have entered two slightly different fasteners to do the same job.Tim Hicks
N96872
Comment
-
Re: Painting T-craft project
I found a good readable set of drawings at Essco Aircraft they call them "Taylorcraft BC-12D Schematics" and the cost is $15.00, these list all the proper AN numbers for the fasteners required for each assembly.
Essco Aircraft sells Aircraft Manuals and Pilot Supplies at wholesale prices. We specialize in hard to find Aircraft Manuals and Vintage Aviation Videos. Essco Aircraft stocks Pilot Operating Handbooks (POHs, Pilot Information Manuals (PIMs) Aircraft Owners and operators Manuals. We are the Aircraft Manual People.
Or do a search on their web sight for Taylorcraft BC-12D.
Good LuckRichard Herzberger
N43178 Foundation # 1072
Comment
-
Re: Painting T-craft project
I sent my spreadsheet in its incomplete form to leenicklas.
I tried to start a new thread here on the Forum, but it doesn't allow me to attach spreadsheets.
So I don't plan to do anything further. Richard (Richh2only) has made us aware of a better resource.
If anyone does want to see my spreadsheet, just let me know by PM here or by email to [email protected]Tim Hicks
N96872
Comment
-
Re: Painting T-craft project
Originally posted by TimHicks View PostLee,
I don't know if it is of any use to you or not.
But, as I take apart my airplane in the re-covering process, I am compiling a list of every piece of hardware that I take off of the airplane.
I have a spreadsheet with every fastener that I have touched. It is incomplete because I haven't finished taking the fuse apart yet. But I'm in the middle of that right now.
And I cannot know if what is on my '46 BC-12D airplane is what you will need for your airplane. But I'm willing to make the spreadsheet available to you or to anyone who thinks that it might be useful.
Tim
Comment
Comment