Features
- Package Includes: You will receive 1 pcs airless spray gun, 1 pcs 50ft high pressure hose, 6 pcs spray tips(211 313 415 515 517 623), 4 pcs extension rod(7.87"+7.87"+11.81"+15.75"), 2 pcs nozzle seat, 6 pcs spray gun filter, 1 pcs free wheel and 1 pcs 180 degree rotation spray guide. With just one purchase you have all the accessories you need to paint and start enjoying your painting time!
- Wide Compatible: The airless paint sprayer gun kit can be adapted to most airless paint sprayer, 50ft hose can accommodate a variety of work areas. Six modle of nozzles and four sizes of extension rods can meet your various spraying needs. The nozzle seat and spray gun filter can help you prevent paint splashes or drips, filter impurities in the paint and avoid nozzle clogging. The spray guide accessories tool can help you rapid spraying edges and trimming.
- Easy Installation: The airless paint sprayer gun are very easy to install. You only need to install the tip seal on the nozzle, then insert the spray tip into the nozzle and slightly rotate it to complete the installation. Then connect the spray gun and paint sprayer with a high pressure pipe to start your spraying work.(You can learn detailed installation steps, replacement steps for the spray gun filter element, and how to install the spray guide accessory tool through pictures.)
- Material: The spray gun and other accessories are made of aluminum alloy and stainless steel, high pressure hose is made of polymer fibers, the spray tip is made of tungsten steel, which is strong and durable. It feels comfortable and will not be easily damaged even after long-term use. At the same time, the spray tip adopt a reversible design, you just need to rotate the spray tip 180° and pull the trigger, it will be quickly complete the cleaning and dredge the blockage.
- Wide Application: The airless paint sprayer gun accessories are ideal for spraying doors, trim, interior walls, ceilings, fences, cabinets, sheds, decks and many other places indoors and outdoors, which can meet your needs for various spraying projects.
Specifications
Color | Black and Silver |
Related Tools
This airless paint sprayer gun kit includes a spray gun, a 50 ft high-pressure hose (up to 3600 PSI), six reversible tungsten-steel spray tips (211, 313, 415, 515, 517, 623), four extension rods (7.87", 7.87", 11.81", 15.75"), nozzle seats, filters, a free wheel, and a 180° rotation spray guide. Components are aluminum alloy and stainless steel with a polymer-fiber hose; the reversible tips allow easy cleaning and the kit is compatible with most airless sprayer units for painting trim, walls, ceilings, fences, cabinets, and decks.
Gyfent 22Pcs Airless Paint Sprayer Gun Kit, 3600PSI Airless Spray Gun with 50Ft High Pressure Hose & 6Pcs Reversible Spray Tips & 4Pcs Extension Rod & 6Pcs Filters & Guide Tool & Nozzle Seat Review
A budget-friendly kit that covers the bases
I brought the Gyfent airless gun kit to a weekend repaint of a rental and a fence refresh the following week, aiming to see if a low-cost, all-in-one accessory bundle could hang with my usual pro hardware. Short version: it can. It’s not the most refined setup I own, but it delivers a clean finish and surprising versatility for the money—assuming you’re willing to dial in your technique and give it a little care.
What you get in the box
This isn’t a complete sprayer; it’s a gun-and-accessories kit meant to pair with your existing airless pump. The bundle is generous: a 3600 PSI-rated gun, a 50-foot high-pressure hose, six reversible tungsten-steel tips (211, 313, 415, 515, 517, 623), four extension rods (7.87", 7.87", 11.81", and 15.75"), two nozzle seats, six gun filters, a 180° spray guide, and a small tool. The gun body is aluminum alloy and stainless steel; the hose is a polymer-fiber blend that’s lighter than a typical rubber-jacketed line.
For most homeowners and many pros, that spread covers 90% of common jobs: interior walls and ceilings, trim and doors, cabinets, fences, sheds, and decks. The tip assortment is well chosen, and the extensions let you reach soffits and high walls without dragging out a ladder for every strip.
Setup and compatibility
I hooked the gun to a mid-size piston pump with standard fittings. Installation was straightforward: seat the tip seal, slide in the reversible tip, snap on the guard, and connect the hose. After a water flush and a quick pressure test, I primed with interior eggshell. The reversible tips make clog clearing simple—twist 180°, trigger a quick burst into a bucket, spin back, and you’re spraying again.
The included gun filters are a nice touch. I started with a medium mesh, strained the paint, and had very few clogs even using the finer-pattern tips.
Build and ergonomics
Ergonomically, the Gyfent gun is serviceable. The handle shape is comfortable for medium hands and the weight is reasonable, especially without an extension. The trigger pull is on the heavier side out of the box—noticeably firmer than higher-end guns. After a couple of flushes and a drop of gun lube on the needle/packings, it settled into a more predictable feel, but it’s still springy. If you spray for hours, you’ll feel it in your hand.
Fit and finish are acceptable. The machining and guard are not as refined as premium guns, but threads engaged cleanly, the trigger action was consistent, and the safety lock worked every time. For a budget kit, that’s the baseline I want to see.
Hose and reach
The 50-foot hose is a big convenience for interior work. It’s light, carries easily, and doesn’t put as much drag on the gun arm as thicker pro hoses. It does have some coil memory out of the box—lay it flat in the sun or run warm water through it to relax the kinks before your first project. Under working pressures (I ran between 1800–2400 PSI depending on material and tip), the hose held pressure with no leaks and minimal whip.
Tips, patterns, and finish quality
Tip quality ultimately makes or breaks a spray job, and this kit’s tips performed well overall. I used the 515 for walls and ceilings with standard interior latex and got a uniform, soft-edged fan with no tails at around 2000–2200 PSI. For cabinet boxes and doors, the 415 gave me good control with a slightly reduced flow, minimizing orange peel after thinning and proper filtering. On an exterior fence, the 517 and 623 moved material quickly; dialing back pressure slightly kept the fan stable while maintaining coverage.
I did encounter one tip that produced a slightly narrow fan compared to its marking. A quick swap to another tip solved it. That kind of variance isn’t unusual in budget kits, but it’s something to monitor—always test your pattern on cardboard before hitting the work.
Extensions and edging
The four extension rods add real utility. On a high living room wall, the 11.81" extension kept me off the ladder for most of the pass. On soffits, stacking the 15.75" with one of the shorter sections gave me reach without the wobble you sometimes get with extra-long single-piece poles. Thread engagement was solid, with no wobble once snugged down.
If you’re seeing tiger stripes (faint lines) when using extensions, that’s usually a technique issue, not the extension itself. Keep the gun square to the surface, hold a consistent 10–12" distance, overlap by 50%, and avoid arcing the pass. You can also nudge the pressure up 100–200 PSI to stabilize the fan if you’re right on the edge.
The 180° spray guide is handy for cutting along ceilings, floors, or trim where you want less overspray. It’s not a magic wand—you still need to mask smartly—but it sped up room edges compared to freehanding with a card.
Maintenance and cleaning
Cleaning is straightforward. Reverse the tip and purge into a waste bucket, then flush the line with water or solvent until clean. Pop the guard, pull the filter, and rinse it thoroughly. The reversible tips make clearing clogs mid-job painless and double as a quick clean-out step at the end of the day. I recommend a drop of lubricant on the needle and packings after cleaning; it lightened my trigger feel and kept the action crisp.
Performance across projects
- Interior walls and ceilings (515 tip): smooth finish and even fan at moderate pressure. Minimal spitting once primed and burped.
- Doors and cabinets (415 tip): with properly thinned enamel and a fine filter, I achieved a respectable, semi-pro finish. It’s not a glassy, boutique-gun result, but easily good enough for rentals and many homeowner projects.
- Exterior fence/deck (517/623 tips): fast material laydown; the gun kept up without surging. Extensions reduced ladder time meaningfully.
Where it comes up short
- Trigger effort: Heavier than premium guns. It loosens a bit with use and lube but remains on the firm side.
- Tip consistency: Most tips patterned correctly; I had one oddball with a narrower fan. Always test first, and keep a backup tip handy.
- Hose memory: The hose wants to coil at first. It improves after a couple of uses but benefits from a warm pre-stretch.
- Refinement: Minor, but the overall feel—trigger, guard, machining—telegraphs “budget.” It functions, just without the polish of pro-tier hardware.
I didn’t encounter leaks or spraying after releasing the trigger. If you see dribble, check that the tip and seal are correctly oriented, the needle is clean, and the packings aren’t contaminated with dried paint. A neglected gun will misbehave regardless of brand.
Who it’s for
- Homeowners and DIYers who want a complete, compatible kit to pair with an existing pump.
- Pros who need a backup gun, a spare hose and tips, or a ready-to-go kit for occasional jobs and helpers.
- Anyone tackling a one-off or seasonal project where value and breadth of accessories beat top-shelf ergonomics.
If you’re spraying every day, chasing the finest cabinet finishes, or you’re sensitive to heavy triggers, a higher-end gun will serve you better long term.
Recommendation
I recommend the Gyfent airless gun kit as a solid value bundle for most painting projects. It sprays clean patterns with the included tips, the hose and extensions extend your reach without headaches, and the reversible design and filters keep downtime to a minimum. The trigger pull is a bit heavy and the overall feel is more utilitarian than refined, but the finish quality is absolutely there once you’ve tuned pressure and technique. For homeowners and budget-minded pros, it’s an easy pick; for full-time finish work, consider it a capable backup rather than your daily driver.
Project Ideas
Business
Residential Paint & Trim Service
Start a small interior/exterior painting business focusing on faster turnarounds using the airless sprayer for walls, ceilings, trim and doors. Market to homeowners and realtors for quick turnovers; price jobs by square footage or room with add-ons for trim and detail work. Use reversible tips and onboard filters to minimize downtime and keep labor costs low.
Cabinet & Furniture Refinishing Shop
Offer cabinet repainting/refinishing and furniture restoration—strip, prep, spray, and seal in controlled shop environments. Promote mid-priced cabinet updates (refacing vs full replacement) to homeowners and landlords. The fine tips and spray guide help deliver factory-smooth finishes that command higher margins.
Deck & Fence Staining Service
Provide seasonal deck and fence staining and sealing—an easy recurring-revenue service. The long hose and extension rods speed application on large outdoor surfaces; offer maintenance plans (annual or biennial) for regular income. Target neighborhood associations, property managers, and vacation rental owners.
Mobile Mural & Signage Studio
Use the sprayer for fast, large-format signage, retail displays, and outdoor murals for businesses. Offer pop-up installations and storefront refreshes—upsell protective clear coats for longevity. Promote to cafes, boutiques, event planners and local governments; capture higher rates for creative, custom work.
Tool Rental + Training Workshops
Rent out the airless sprayer kit to DIYers with optional add-ons (masks, tarps, tips) and offer weekend workshops on safe setup, tip selection, and finish techniques. Charge a rental fee plus a short training session or operate a membership model. This reduces capital needs for customers and builds a local customer base for repeat business and referrals.
Creative
Custom Furniture Makeovers
Use the airless sprayer to refinish dressers, tables, cabinets and chairs quickly with smooth, even coats. The reversible tips let you switch between lacquer, latex, or stain; use fine tips (211/313) for cabinets and larger tips (415+) for tabletops. Combine base coats, metallic glazes, or color washes for modern looks and seal with a protective clear coat.
Large-scale Canvas & Mural Work
Create bold abstract canvases or temporary murals on plywood/fabric using gradients, splatters and layered spraying techniques. The 50ft hose and extension rods make it easy to cover tall panels or sections of walls. Experiment with masks and stencils for crisp shapes, then add hand-detailed highlights after the spray dries.
Decks, Fences & Outdoor Art
Produce uniform stains and protective coatings for decks and fences far faster than brushes. Use the 180° rotation spray guide for edge work and reversible tips for quick unclogging during stain sessions. Add decorative accents—stenciled motifs, two-tone rails, or faux wood grain—on inexpensive plywood yard signs or planter boxes to sell locally.
Textured & Faux Finishes
Layer sprayed glazes, speckled textures, and metallic washes to mimic concrete, stone, or weathered metal on feature walls, tabletops, or props. Adjust spray pressure and tip size to control droplet size for stippling or soft veils. Combine with soft sanding and hand distressing for realistic aged effects.
Fast Batch Production of Decor
Turn small wood or MDF panels, picture frames, and lamp bases into coordinated sets using repeatable spray recipes (base color, wash, seal). Use the hose to set up a spray station and the included filters to reduce clogging during longer runs. This is great for craft fairs—make 20+ matching items in a single afternoon.