Founded in 1989, we are the premier wood manufacturing solutions provider in the Intermountain West.
Our Mission is to be your partner by providing long-term solutions to maximize your profits and increase the productivity and value of your business. We accomplish this through education on best practices and trends, quality service, training, and offering machinery from the most respected manufacturers in the industry. We are in it for the long-haul and understand that if you aren't successful, we aren't successful.
We view our customers as partners, and our vast network of long-term partners in Utah, Idaho, Montana, Wyoming, Colorado, and Northern Arizona is a testament of our dedication and success in helping improve the businesses of the wood manufacturers we partner with.
@@gsuandre5579not in this case. This machine has the paper belt not the that reclaimes the over spray. We just got a flatline system been using it for a month now. I really had no idea how much maintenance was involved. There is only 2 if us and we spend more time cleaning and changing paper then doing any work. Plus you use almost double the amount if product lol
@MrSpeaker69 geeez, that sounds backwards, like traying to use a spray machine in a closet, the prep and cleaning time would greater than just get a roller and get the job done, i retract my previous stament.
We are getting a makor K 2 just curious what is the minimum about of product you have to put into the lines. Like say you only have to run a small job that only need like a gallon to complete.
That is a nice machine, but it is not a belt sander... It is a brush sander. A belt sander would remove all that primer coat. I suppose anyone that bother to click on this clip already knows that! haha
We run the same machine in our finish room. Yes you can see the fingerprints. However, its sealer sanding dust which is also clear, so as long as the large debris/dust is removed, the coating applied during spraying (should be between 3 and 4 wet mils) is more than sufficient to cover and leave a glass smooth surface. You can tack wipe, solvent wipe, and blow the doors off and you'll never not see fingerprints just from the pressure applied while holding the door. You'll never see it in the finished product
@@bryanherzog702 Iam sparying with a AAA gun and no matter how much I clean it off I still seam to get small dust at random. Iam running in a booth with airmake up. sanding with the very fine inbetween coats. What do you sand with inbetween coats?