Thank you for the well thought out review. I have a number of ozito products and am currently looking at getting a paint spray gun so this is much appreciated.
Thanks for this video, helped me make a decision. I had the battery one previously but wasn't keen on the weight (and my son played with parts and lost them)
I have a corded sprayer and it was a pain in the backside running an extension cable down the back of my yard to do my back fence!! Gonna check out that cordless for sure!!
@@MarkWhippy both have about the same amount of overspray. They are not as precise as the ones professional painters use. But there’s also not a huge amount. I’d say one of the reasons is that it’s cordless and the other reason is that you can use it for thicker paints
Iv got the battery one, and when I pull the trigger it spits out thick drops of paint out, and then sprays nice and thin like it should do, but it ruins my finishing with the thick paint first come out of the nozzle of the gun. 😢
@@NicoleHerrickDIY Yes just at the very start for the first second when I pull the trigger, I get about 8 big splots of paint and then it sprays as it should, it’s soo frustrating
@@NicoleHerrickDIYYea but it happen every time to pull the trigger? When I’m painting furniture you constantly stop start stop start painting while doing a job painting, and every time I start painting again and pull the trigger it spits thick blobs, is that how they all are?
G'day. Which one has the wider spray pattern? Which one gives the best finish? I used the corded Ozito to paint my car 8yrs ago using WhiteKnight RustGuard. I found the spray pattern was very narrow. Also it leaked when doing flat surfaces like the boot, roof and bonnet. As it goes, I'm now doing another car and looking for a spraygun. I see the latest corded version is now 400w instead of the 300w when I bought it. Pity they didn't include other tip sizes. Which is why the cordless one appeals...
They are both about the same width. I have just painted my van but I didn’t do it with either of these, the spray just isn’t fine enough. You’re much better off with an air compressor spray gun to be honest. Ask around your mates, plenty of people will have an air compressor they can loan you and you can just buy the gun part. The ozito airless will always leak if you’re pointing straight down. I did my van with LOTS of spray cans. I didn’t have power in the warehouse I was working in so it was my best option. You really need that super fine mist spray for cars.
@@NicoleHerrickDIY thanks for the reply. As I said I painted my current car 8yrs ago with the original Ozito electric gun, it gets comments wherever I go...but a satin black '75 Kingswood will get comments regardless of the paint haha. I've just primed another car using a Wagner W200 and it's miles ahead of the original Ozito. I purchased the extra gun with the 1.8mm tip for it where as the original Ozito has a 2.5mm tip. The battery Ozito with it's different size tips in 1.5 and 1.8 would probably do just as good if it actually moves enough air, but I'd reckon a few batteries would be needed! I wish they'd make different size tips for the corded Ozito because I paid over $200 for the Wagner setup.
Did anyone else see the spider run past?
Thank you for the well thought out review. I have a number of ozito products and am currently looking at getting a paint spray gun so this is much appreciated.
You’re welcome
Many thanks! The review helped me to decide. Bought the corded one!
Awesome, so glad it was helpful.
Thanks, I was looking everywhere for a good review on the battery one.
You’re welcome
Thanks for your review and comparing.
You’re so welcome
Thanks for this video, helped me make a decision. I had the battery one previously but wasn't keen on the weight (and my son played with parts and lost them)
Those tiny parts are so easy to lose aren’t they!
Great presentation 👏
So funny 😆
That's how I sound getting up 😂😅😪
Thanks
Thanks Terry
Thanks for the review.
I have a corded sprayer and it was a pain in the backside running an extension cable down the back of my yard to do my back fence!! Gonna check out that cordless for sure!!
Yeah I love the benefit of cordless, will use this a lot for sure. But not for walls, just way too heavy.
Thank you. A great help
You’re welcome
Why do they call the cordless one an 'outdoor' spray gun. Surely it can be used indoors?
It’s because it was specifically designed for outdoor paint with it’s different nozzles. But yeah, I use it with indoor paint as well with no issues.
@@NicoleHerrickDIY Has it got something to do with the amount of overspray?
@@MarkWhippy both have about the same amount of overspray. They are not as precise as the ones professional painters use. But there’s also not a huge amount. I’d say one of the reasons is that it’s cordless and the other reason is that you can use it for thicker paints
Iv got the battery one, and when I pull the trigger it spits out thick drops of paint out, and then sprays nice and thin like it should do, but it ruins my finishing with the thick paint first come out of the nozzle of the gun. 😢
Is it only at the very start? If so that’s quite normal. Just have cardboard box handy that you can spray into until it sprays correctly.
@@NicoleHerrickDIY Yes just at the very start for the first second when I pull the trigger, I get about 8 big splots of paint and then it sprays as it should, it’s soo frustrating
@@leighelliott5097 even spray paint cans do this, it’s a normal part of spray painting, just always spray on out the goop before you start.
@@NicoleHerrickDIYYea but it happen every time to pull the trigger? When I’m painting furniture you constantly stop start stop start painting while doing a job painting, and every time I start painting again and pull the trigger it spits thick blobs, is that how they all are?
@@leighelliott5097 you could give Ozito customer care a ring and ask them what the problem might be. Here’s the number 1800 069 486
G'day. Which one has the wider spray pattern? Which one gives the best finish?
I used the corded Ozito to paint my car 8yrs ago using WhiteKnight RustGuard. I found the spray pattern was very narrow. Also it leaked when doing flat surfaces like the boot, roof and bonnet.
As it goes, I'm now doing another car and looking for a spraygun. I see the latest corded version is now 400w instead of the 300w when I bought it. Pity they didn't include other tip sizes. Which is why the cordless one appeals...
They are both about the same width. I have just painted my van but I didn’t do it with either of these, the spray just isn’t fine enough. You’re much better off with an air compressor spray gun to be honest. Ask around your mates, plenty of people will have an air compressor they can loan you and you can just buy the gun part. The ozito airless will always leak if you’re pointing straight down. I did my van with LOTS of spray cans. I didn’t have power in the warehouse I was working in so it was my best option. You really need that super fine mist spray for cars.
@@NicoleHerrickDIY thanks for the reply. As I said I painted my current car 8yrs ago with the original Ozito electric gun, it gets comments wherever I go...but a satin black '75 Kingswood will get comments regardless of the paint haha. I've just primed another car using a Wagner W200 and it's miles ahead of the original Ozito. I purchased the extra gun with the 1.8mm tip for it where as the original Ozito has a 2.5mm tip. The battery Ozito with it's different size tips in 1.5 and 1.8 would probably do just as good if it actually moves enough air, but I'd reckon a few batteries would be needed! I wish they'd make different size tips for the corded Ozito because I paid over $200 for the Wagner setup.
I did the undercoat on a 50ft yacht with this and it did an excellent job
@@babylonhobbiesandfpv4862 cool. What type of paint did you use for the yacht?
Polyurethane top coat and 2 pack high build epoxy for the undercoat
👍🏾👍🏾👍🏾👍🏾
😁😁😁😁
Lewis Jason Gonzalez Robert Walker Laura
Jones Margaret Williams Daniel Wilson Larry