You might need to thin out whatever product it is that you are using.
If there is no air, then you cannot adjust pressure.
motor oil
any tool rental store and at most Home Depots.
Yes. Use a .013 to .021 tip.
You can, but airless sprayers are not designed to broadcast material, rather to apply material in a specific area. Depending on the capacity of the airless sprayer and the tip used, you'll only apply as little as a quart per minute onto the surface. Better alternatives would be a pressure washer using the fluid injector or a pump-up garden sprayer.
The sprayer continually sprays globs of paint onto the wall regardless of how diluted the paint is.
There are many stores that sell airless sprayers. Some stores that sell these types of sprays are Walmart, Lowes, The Home Depot, and Sherwin-Williams.
You can find information about refurbishing your furniture with an airless sprayer at www.chpower.com/.../wcs/.../chCat_10051_10001_10661_-1. You will not want to do this indoors.
it sprays the garden
If there is no air, then you cannot adjust pressure.
motor oil
any tool rental store and at most Home Depots.
Yes. Use a .013 to .021 tip.
You can, but airless sprayers are not designed to broadcast material, rather to apply material in a specific area. Depending on the capacity of the airless sprayer and the tip used, you'll only apply as little as a quart per minute onto the surface. Better alternatives would be a pressure washer using the fluid injector or a pump-up garden sprayer.
Airless spray painters are powered by many different motors including electric, both AC and DC, gas, propane, hydraulic and air.
You normally do not need to thin oil-based paint prior to spraying through an airless sprayer. If you do thin, do not add more than a pint of thinner per gallon, two ounces per quart.
It is a pump. An airless sprayer takes the paint and compresses it (or tries to compress it) so that it comes out of the spray tip at a very high pressure. There are a couple different types. One is a diaphragm type, the other is a piston type. A C.A.P. or HVLP sprayer are different than the airless. They use air pressure to pull the paint out of a receptacle and atomize or disperse the paint with the air.