MP Spray Gun

The PORPHIS MP (Medium Pressure) Spray Gun bridges the gap between high-transfer efficiency and the raw atomization power needed for heavier coatings. Operating at 10CFM and 22–32 PSI, MP guns handle thicker materials — primers, epoxies, and high-build coatings — without sacrificing spray consistency. Designed for painters who work across multiple substrates and need a versatile, all-conditions performer that adapts to the job rather than the other way around.

PHS-155 Car Paint Sprayer PORPHIS

PHS-155 MP SPRAY GUN

Comprehensive warranty: 1-YEAR
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FAQs

Q1: I've been using an HVLP gun and want to upgrade. How will the PHS-155 feel different?

A: The most immediate difference is spray speed. MP atomization moves more material per pass than HVLP — your passes will cover more surface area faster, and the gun will feel more "responsive" when you pull the trigger. The trade-off is slightly less margin for error: faster material delivery means technique matters more than with HVLP. Most painters upgrading from HVLP to MP adapt within one or two practice sessions. The PHS-155 is specifically designed as this transition gun — its fluid control is linear and forgiving enough to ease the learning curve while giving you the full benefit of MP performance.

Q2: Can the PHS-155 really handle clear coat well? My HVLP gun always left slight texture.

A: Yes — this is exactly the problem MP atomization solves compared to HVLP for clear coat. HVLP's slower droplet velocity means clear coat has less momentum to flow out and level on the surface before beginning to flash, which causes the slight texture you're describing. MP atomization produces finer, faster droplets that lay wetter on the surface and flow out more completely before flash-off begins. The result is a smoother, more level clear coat finish that needs less cutting and polishing to achieve gloss. For painters who have been frustrated by HVLP clear coat texture, switching to the PHS-155 is typically a clear and immediate improvement.

Q3: What's the learning curve from using the PHS-155 for the first time?

A: For someone coming from HVLP, expect one practice session (a test panel or two) to recalibrate your hand speed and distance. MP guns reward slightly faster arm movement than HVLP — you'll move the gun quicker per pass to compensate for the higher material delivery. The PHS-155's variable fluid control lets you reduce material flow below full capacity while you're finding your rhythm, effectively giving you a "training mode" before opening to full delivery. Most users are producing consistent results within their second or third panel.

Q4: What's the ideal air pressure setting for clear coat with the PHS-155?

A: For clear coat application, start at 1.8 bar (26 PSI) at the gun inlet with the fluid control 2 turns open. Your first pass should show a wet, flowing coat without runs — if it's dry or textured, increase pressure slightly to 2.0 bar. If you see runs, reduce fluid control by a quarter turn rather than increasing distance. The optimal clear coat result with the PHS-155 is a wet-looking surface that levels within 2–3 minutes without sagging. Finding this balance on a test panel before the actual job takes 10 minutes and prevents the most common clear coat mistakes.

Q5: How is the PHS-155 different from the PRD series guns? Am I getting a less capable tool?

A: The PHS and PRD series are engineered for different use environments, not different quality levels. The PHS-155 is designed for painters who spray regularly but not in heavy production shop environments — DIY enthusiasts, small body shop operators, refinishing professionals doing varied project types. The PRD series guns (PRD-715, PRD-815) are built for high-frequency, high-volume shop production where the gun runs for 8+ hours daily over years. Internal component standards — atomization quality, seal materials, fluid path precision — are consistent with Porphis engineering criteria across both lines. The 155 is not a step down from PRD; it's a different optimization for a different user.

Q6: I want to spray both waterborne and solvent clears with the same gun. Can the PHS-155 handle both?

A: Yes. The PHS-155's stainless steel needle and nozzle with PTFE seal are chemically compatible with both waterborne and solvent-based clear coats. The critical adjustment when switching between them is viscosity — waterborne clears are typically thinner at application viscosity, so reduce fluid control by half a turn when switching from solvent to waterborne to maintain consistent film build. Clean thoroughly between material types: flush with water for waterborne residue, then flush with lacquer thinner before introducing solvent clear. The fluid path seals maintain integrity with both solvent families.

Q7: Is the 600ml cup included with the PHS-155 sufficient for a full car clear coat job?

A: For a full vehicle clear coat, a 600ml cup typically covers 2–3 panels per fill — you'll refill 4–6 times for a complete car. This is normal for professional guns in this class. The 600ml aluminum cup is the preferred size for balance reasons: a 1000ml cup adds significant weight when full, causing wrist fatigue during overhead and low-angle work. The trade-off of more frequent refills versus better gun balance is one most experienced painters make deliberately. If you're doing very large surface areas continuously (commercial vehicle sides, large furniture panels), a pressure pot with remote cup eliminates refilling entirely — the PHS-155 is compatible with pressure pot setups..

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