Spray guns on the market come in all shapes and sizes, with prices ranging from under $20 to over $500. The most common mistake beginners make is getting distracted by flashy marketing and外观, buying features they'll never use, or falling into invisible traps.
The truth is, when it comes to getting a good finish, only 4 core parameters really matter. Everything else is just nice to have.
Let's get straight to it.
Parameter 1: Nozzle Size (The Most Important One)
This is the first number you should look at.
Nozzle size determines:
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What type of paint you can spray
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How much paint flows out
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How well the paint atomizes
| Nozzle Size | Best For | Typical Use |
|---|---|---|
| 0.5–0.8mm | Thin paints (model paints, ink, very thin primers) | Models, miniatures, fine art |
| 1.0–1.4mm | Medium-viscosity paints (wood coatings, nitro paints, automotive primers) | Most common range for beginners |
| 1.5–1.8mm | Thicker paints (latex, heavy primers, rust paint) | Furniture, metal parts |
| 2.0mm+ | High-viscosity coatings (thick paints, exterior paints) | Professional work, large-area spraying |
Bottom line for beginners:
Go with 1.3mm or 1.4mm. This size covers 80% of home and DIY scenarios — from woodworking to models, from primer to topcoat.
⚠️ Avoid: Don't fall for "universal nozzle" claims (e.g., 0.5–2.5mm adjustable). Most are gimmicks. Professional spray guns have fixed nozzle sizes.
Parameter 2: Operating Air Pressure
This parameter determines what kind of air compressor you need.
Every spray gun's manual will list a "recommended pressure," typically between 2.0–3.5 bar (30–50 PSI).
| Pressure Range | Best For | Compressor Requirement |
|---|---|---|
| 2.0–2.5 bar | Fine spraying, models, thin paints | Small compressor (20–30L tank) is fine |
| 2.5–3.0 bar | General spraying, wood, furniture | 30L+ tank recommended |
| 3.0 bar+ | High-viscosity paints, large areas | High-output compressor needed (50L+) |
Bottom line for beginners:
Choose a spray gun with a recommended pressure of 2.0–2.5 bar. The lower the pressure requirement, the lower the bar for your compressor — and the less likely you'll run into air supply issues.
⚠️ Avoid: Don't get caught up by claims like "max pressure 4 bar+". You'll be using the recommended pressure, not the max. Too much pressure will just blow paint away and waste material.
Parameter 3: Paint Cup Type
This determines how easy it is to add paint and how comfortable it is to spray larger items.
| Type | How It Works | Pros | Cons | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gravity Feed (cup on top) | Paint flows down by gravity | Paint-efficient, easy to clean, great for small batches | Smaller cup (100–400cc), can leak if tilted | Beginners, models, small items |
| Siphon Feed (cup on bottom) | Paint is sucked up by vacuum | Larger cup (600–1000cc), interchangeable cups | Wastes paint, harder to clean | Large areas, industrial use |
| Pressure Feed (external tank) | Paint pushed by pressure | Very large capacity, remote feeding | Complex setup, expensive | Production lines, professional shops |
Bottom line for beginners:
Go with gravity feed. Simple reason: it saves paint, is easy to clean, and is quick to learn. When you're spraying dozens of large items a day, then consider siphon feed.
💡 Pro tip: For gravity feed guns, get a removable cup with a lid. You won't spill paint everywhere if you accidentally knock it over.
Parameter 4: Atomization Technology (HVLP vs. Conventional)
This determines how efficiently you use paint and how smooth the finish is.
There are two main types of spray guns on the market:
| Type | How It Works | Pros | Cons |
|---|---|---|---|
| HVLP (High Volume Low Pressure) | High air volume + low pressure "pushes" paint | Paint-efficient (65–85% transfer rate) , less overspray, cleaner | Needs higher air volume from compressor |
| Conventional High Pressure | High pressure "blasts" paint | Strong atomization, lower compressor requirement | Wastes paint (20–40% transfer rate), lots of overspray |
Bottom line for beginners:
If your setup allows, choose HVLP. Especially if you're spraying indoors, in a garage, or don't want to waste paint — HVLP will save you money over time.
⚠️ Note: HVLP requires more air volume from your compressor. Before buying, make sure your compressor can deliver at least 150–200 L/min. If your compressor is too small, HVLP won't perform well.
Summary: One Table to Rule Them All
| Parameter | Beginner Recommendation | What to Avoid |
|---|---|---|
| Nozzle Size | 1.3mm or 1.4mm | "Universal adjustable" nozzles |
| Operating Pressure | 2.0–2.5 bar | Looking at max pressure instead of recommended |
| Cup Type | Gravity feed (cup on top) | Choosing siphon feed just for a larger cup |
| Atomization | HVLP preferred | Make sure your compressor has enough airflow |
The Honest Truth
The spray gun itself is just an "executor." What really determines your results is the whole system — the right nozzle size, matched air pressure, correct cup type, and sufficient air supply.
Get these 4 parameters right, and you don't need to spend a fortune to get a great spray gun.
Your first spraying experience shouldn't be ruined by choosing the wrong specs.
