LP Tribute refinish, take 2...

Steve, you will save yourself a lot of pain and suffering and stress if you pick up an HVLP touch-up gun
practice with it for a half hour then tint and thin your Tru-oil. They are not that expensive and perfect for
guitar and in particular burst work. And you don't need the biggest industrial compressor either.

if fact now I see this I'm wondering why I don't use mine more for leather, I initially purchased it
for my guitar refinishing years ago- then decided I didn't like spraying anymore. Perhaps that's you as well.

I do however salute your stick-to-it-'tude, and will cheer you on from the sidelines no matter how you decide.
 
Steve, you will save yourself a lot of pain and suffering and stress if you pick up an HVLP touch-up gun
practice with it for a half hour then tint and thin your Tru-oil. They are not that expensive and perfect for
guitar and in particular burst work. And you don't need the biggest industrial compressor either.

if fact now I see this I'm wondering why I don't use mine more for leather, I initially purchased it
for my guitar refinishing years ago- then decided I didn't like spraying anymore. Perhaps that's you as well.

I do however salute your stick-to-it-'tude, and will cheer you on from the sidelines no matter how you decide.

Thanks. Maybe one of these days, but right now I don't have a place to spray and don't really want to anyway.
 
With the small touch-up gun mine adjusts to spray about an inch and a half wide down to about 5/8" wide footprint. Like about four times as big as a hobby airbrush. You don't need a lot of space, of course protection/ventilation are important considerations but not a lot of overspray to deal with.
Just in case you've never seen one in action. Ideal for bursty work, and workable for general coverage for guitar-sized items
 
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