Many beginners pick up a spray gun and think "just point and spray" – only to end up with runs, orange peel, or uneven coats. In reality, using a spray gun is a skill. The core principles come down to three variables: Distance, Angle, and Speed. Master these three, and you'll go from "just spraying" to "spraying well."
1. Distance: The Golden Rule of 15-20cm
Keep the nozzle 15-20cm away from the surface – this is the optimal working distance for most spray guns.
| Distance | Result |
|---|---|
| Too close (<10cm) | Excessive airflow, paint buildup → runs and sags |
| Too far (>25cm) | Paint dries before reaching surface → orange peel, rough texture, wasted paint |
| Optimal (15-20cm) | Even atomization, uniform coverage |
Tip: If you can't judge the distance by eye, use your hand – the width from your index finger to your pinky is roughly 15cm.
2. Angle: Always Maintain 90° Perpendicular
The gun should always be kept at a 90° angle to the surface, whether you're moving horizontally or vertically.
Common mistakes:
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❌ Arcing: Rotating your wrist, pointing the gun outward at the ends of each pass → thin in the middle, thick at the edges
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❌ Tilting: Gun body angled → uneven paint distribution
Correct technique:
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✅ Move with your body: Keep your wrist locked, move your whole body or arm to guide the gun
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✅ Keep parallel to the surface: Imagine you're pushing a glass pane that's parallel to the wall
3. Speed: Steady Movement at 30-40cm per Second
Move at a consistent speed of 30-40cm per second (about the length of an A4 sheet of paper per second).
| Speed | Result |
|---|---|
| Too slow | Too much paint → runs, heavy edges |
| Too fast | Not enough paint → thin spots, orange peel, rough surface |
| Steady | Even film thickness in a single coat |
Tips:
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Start moving before pulling the trigger, and release the trigger before stopping movement – this prevents paint buildup at the start and end points
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Use a metronome or silently count "tick-tock" to keep rhythm
4. Spray Technique: 50% Overlap is Key
Each spray pass creates a "stroke." The next stroke should overlap the previous one by 50% of its width.
Pass 1: ████████████ Pass 2: ████████████ (50% overlap) Pass 3: ████████████
Why 50% overlap?
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Ensures consistent film thickness across the entire surface
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Prevents "tiger striping" (visible lines between passes)
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The overspray at the edges of one pass gets covered by the next, creating a smooth transition
5. Trigger Technique: The Most Overlooked Detail
Start: Pull the trigger before reaching the workpiece, then move steadily into the spray area
Stop: Release the trigger after exiting the workpiece
Benefits:
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Prevents "fat edges" (paint buildup at the workpiece boundaries)
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Ensures edges are as smooth as the center
Mnemonic: Move first, then spray. Stop spraying before stopping movement. Start outside the edge, end outside the edge.
6. Pre-Spray Checklist
Run through this checklist before each spraying session:
| Check | Standard |
|---|---|
| ☐ Distance | 15-20cm – measure with your forearm if needed |
| ☐ Angle | 90° perpendicular – lock your wrist |
| ☐ Speed | Steady, 30-40cm per second |
| ☐ Overlap | 50% – cover half of the previous pass |
| ☐ Trigger | Start and stop outside the workpiece |
7. Troubleshooting Quick Reference
| Problem | Possible Cause | Solution |
|---|---|---|
| Runs/Sags | Too close / moving too slow | Pull back to 20cm, increase speed |
| Orange peel (rough surface) | Too far / moving too fast / paint too thick | Move to 15cm, slow down, thin the paint |
| Thin middle, thick edges | Arcing the wrist | Keep gun parallel to the surface |
| Tiger striping (visible lines) | Insufficient overlap | Increase overlap from 30% to 50% |
| Fat edges | Triggering on the workpiece | Start and stop outside the workpiece |
| Thin spots (substrate showing) | Moving too fast / insufficient overlap | Slow down, increase overlap |
Final Words
There's no shortcut to mastering a spray gun. It's all about practicing the three fundamentals: Distance, Angle, and Speed. Grab a piece of scrap cardboard or an old board and run 10-20 passes using the methods above – the feel will come naturally.
Remember the mantra: 15cm, 90 degrees, 30cm per sec, 50% overlap, trigger off the edge.
Happy spraying – and may your finishes be mirror-smooth!
