The Paint Sprayer Guide I Wish I Had 15 Years Ago
When I started Kerr's Painting & Renovations, I thought every paint sprayer was basically the same. Fifteen years and probably 300 gallons of paint later, I can tell you that's dead wrong. The right sprayer saves you days of labor. The wrong one costs you time, money, and your sanity.
Here's what I've learned running a painting business — and what I'd tell any homeowner or DIYer before they drop money on a sprayer.
The Three Sprayers You Actually Need to Know About
Graco Magnum X7 — The Workhorse
If you're painting more than one room, this is the one. The Graco Magnum X7 is an airless sprayer that pulls directly from a 1- or 5-gallon bucket, so you're not constantly refilling a tiny cup. It handles up to 125 gallons per year and supports up to 100 feet of hose — meaning you can leave the unit in one spot and spray an entire floor.
I've used the X7 on everything from kitchen cabinets to exterior siding. The adjustable pressure control lets you dial back for trim work or crank it up for ceilings. Stainless steel piston pump means it won't rust out on you.
The X7 is the sweet spot: pro-level performance without the pro-level price tag. If you're painting a whole house interior, this pays for itself on the first job.
Graco Magnum Project Painter Plus — Budget Entry Point
This is the one I recommend to friends who just want to paint a couple rooms or some furniture. The Graco Magnum Project Painter Plus is lighter, simpler, and costs about half what the X7 does. Fully adjustable pressure, supports up to 50 feet of hose, and sprays unthinned paint straight from the can.
The trade-off: it's rated for about 50 gallons per year. Fine for a homeowner, not enough for a pro. But if you've been rolling walls by hand, this will change your life.
Wagner Control Pro 130 — The Dark Horse
Wagner's answer to the entry-level airless market. The Wagner Control Pro 130 uses High Efficiency Airless (HEA) technology that reduces overspray by up to 55% compared to traditional airless sprayers. That means less masking, less wasted paint, and less cleanup.
The stand-mounted design is stable, and it handles unthinned latex paint without complaint. For interior work where overspray control matters, this one deserves a serious look.
HVLP vs Airless: Quick Breakdown
HVLP sprayers like the HomeRight Super Finish Max are great for fine finishes — cabinets, furniture, trim work. They atomize paint into a fine mist with minimal overspray. But they're slow for walls and ceilings, and most can't handle unthinned latex.
Airless sprayers (the Gracos and Wagners above) move paint fast. They're built for volume — whole rooms, exteriors, fences. The trade-off is more overspray and a steeper learning curve.
My rule of thumb: if you're painting surfaces measured in square feet, go HVLP. If you're painting surfaces measured in rooms, go airless.
What I Actually Use
My crew runs Graco Magnum X7s for 90% of interior work. We keep an HVLP unit around for cabinet jobs. The Project Painter Plus is what I send home with new guys who want to practice on weekends.
The One Thing Nobody Tells You
Clean the sprayer like your next job depends on it — because it does. Dried paint inside the pump or hose will ruin your day. Run water (or mineral spirits for oil-based) through until it runs clear. Every. Single. Time.
If you've got questions about specific sprayers or techniques, drop them below. I've made every mistake there is so you don't have to.
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