Message from @Babilon
Discord ID: 232530309638389760
spray it for too long and it starts spewing ice
and or ice water
I think that's just condensation
it evaporates pretty quickly
and in any case
you shouldn't spray upside down or for very long periods of time
if it gets too cold just give it a small break
e sure to hold the compressed air can vertical while pressing its 'air-release'.
If you hold it at any other angle than perpendicular to the ground, liquid can omit from the can (which can take a few minutes to evaporate)
sure to hold the compressed air can vertical while pressing its 'air-release'.
If you hold it at any other angle than perpendicular to the ground, liquid can omit from the can (which can take a few minutes to evaporate) did it 😒 🔫
lol
kek
You can stil fuck up the insides with it if you spray it wrong
you'd have to not only spray it wrong, but quickly plug it back in
idk
seems safe enough if you are careful, done it for years
either that or use a decent air compressor
actual air compressor's the best
yeah
just don't set the bar higher than 3
don't wanna blow the caps off
e sure to hold the compressed air can vertical while pressing its 'air-release'.
If you hold it at any other angle than perpendicular to the ground, liquid can omit from the can (which can take a few minutes to evaporate)
sure to hold the compressed air can vertical while pressing its 'air-release'.
If you hold it at any other angle than perpendicular to the ground, liquid can omit from the can (which can take a few minutes to evaporate) did it 😒 🔫
when a gas expands it absorbs heat to do so
as the pressure in the canned air drops, the remaining gas expands which cools it
you're spraying cold air at that point
which causes condensation to freeze on whatever you spray
it doesn't 'spray water' lol
and yes compressors can accumulate moisture in their air tank, but many have moisture filters built in these days
yeah exactly
in any case
if there's a slight hint of moisture from condensation or the air tank
it should go away pretty quickly
if you're doing something delicate like spray paint
it's generally recommended to use a moisture filter inline
but should be fine for just blowing dust around
it's not a lot of moisture unless you're in a super humid environment, it just makes light coats of spray paint a little drippy
nothing like a dusty humid south american summer
but yeah proper usage and common sense