Features
- 1.Complete Set:5Pcs Reversible Airless Spray Nozzle & 2Pcs 30CM Extension Rod & 1Pcs Nozzle Seats & 1Pcs Nozzle Tip Guards & 1Pcs Airless Paint Spray Gun Swivel Joint & 1Pcs Storage Box(211、313、415、517、623)
- 2.High-Quality Materials:Reversible airless spray tip nozzle features a durable 304 stainless steel handle and a tungsten carbide hole, ensuring reliability and resistance to damage. The head is made of leak-proof, wear-resistant, and easy-to-clean stainless steel and nylon.
- 3.Easy to Use:The airless paint extension poles anti-slip groove with a secure thread prevents the sprayer from loosening and sliding.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.
- 4.Practical Design:The airless sprayer tip has a reverse airless cleaning switch tip design, the spray can be quickly cleaned in a reversible position to prevent the tip from clogging, practical and effective for your work.
- 5.Extensive and Practical:These airless spray tip nozzle are suitable for small and medium-sized and large residential, commercial building spraying engineering, spraying inside and outside paint, paint.
Specifications
Color | Multicolor |
Related Tools
A 9-piece accessory set for airless paint sprayers that includes five reversible spray nozzles (sizes 211, 313, 415, 517, 623), two 30 cm extension rods, nozzle seats, tip guards, a swivel joint and a storage box. The nozzles use 304 stainless steel handles with tungsten carbide tips and a reversible cleaning design, while the rods have anti-slip grooves and secure threads; components are stainless steel and nylon for wear and leak resistance.
Uddick 9PCS Airless Paint Sprayer Accessory Set with 5Pcs Reversible Airless Spray Nozzle,2Pcs 30CM Extension Rod, 1Pcs Nozzle Tip Guards and 1Pcs Airless Paint Spray Gun Swivel Joint Review
I picked up the Uddick airless accessory kit to refresh a set of well-worn tips and give myself a bit more reach on ceilings and soffits. After several days of use—interior walls, trim touch‑ups, and a backyard fence—this compact bundle has proven to be a practical, budget-friendly way to keep an airless sprayer working cleanly and efficiently.
What’s in the box and how it fits together
The kit includes:
- Five reversible tips: 211, 313, 415, 517, 623
- Two 30 cm (12 in) extension rods
- One tip guard and nozzle seat
- One swivel joint
- A storage box
The tips have a 304 stainless handle with a tungsten carbide orifice, and the guard/nozzle components mix stainless steel and nylon. The rods include anti-slip grooves and secure threads. The whole setup is straightforward: install the tip seal on the nozzle, seat the tip in the guard, thread the guard to your gun, then connect your hose and go. The included swivel joint drops between hose and gun to reduce hose twist at the wrist—which sounds minor but is surprisingly helpful on longer passes.
I had zero fitment surprises with the gun and hose in my shop. Threads were clean, the tip guard seated positively, and the rods tightened down without drama. If you’re using a less common sprayer, just confirm your guard pattern and thread spec match the industry standard that this kit follows.
Tip selection and real-world performance
Those five tips cover a sensible range for small to large residential tasks. As a refresher: the first digit times two gives you the approximate fan width (inches) at 12 inches from the surface; the last two digits are the orifice size in thousandths of an inch.
Here’s how I used them:
- 211: Detail work and narrow trim, light stains or thinner coatings. Good control with minimal overspray.
- 313: Doors, smaller panels, fence pickets—still precise but more productive than the 211.
- 415: Interior walls with standard latex. This was my main workhorse indoors.
- 517: Exterior siding and larger wall areas with heavier latex; good coverage at a comfortable pace.
- 623: Broad passes on rough fence boards and larger surfaces where speed matters more than a perfect edge.
Pattern quality was consistent once pressure was set properly. I didn’t see classic “tailing” unless I tried to drive pressure lower than the coating wanted. The tungsten carbide orifice cut a clean atomization edge on the 415 and 517 with typical interior/exterior latex. The 211 and 313 were predictable on trim and fence rails, and I liked the control I got around window casings without having to tape the world.
The reversible design remains one of the best features of any modern tip: flip, blast, flip back, keep moving. It cleared minor clogs quickly. As always, relieve pressure and lock the trigger before servicing anything on the gun.
Extensions and the swivel joint
The two 30 cm extensions are simple but effective. They’re long enough to keep the gun out of your face on ceilings and to widen your arc on walls, but short enough to maintain control. The anti-slip grooves do make threading and unthreading easier with gloved hands, and I never had a rod loosen mid-pass.
The swivel joint is more useful than it looks. It relieves hose torque that builds up during long sweeps and awkward angles, and it reduces the urge to over-grip the gun. I found that my wrist and forearm stayed fresher during a long day of fence spraying. The additional stack height from adding the swivel and an extension does increase overall length, so plan your approach in tight corners.
Build quality and durability
Nothing here feels fancy; it feels appropriately robust for daily use. The stainless/nylon guard locks down squarely and seals well. I didn’t experience leakage at the guard or rods during any of my sessions. Threads are clean and engage without galling. The tungsten carbide orifices should hold up across many gallons, though, like any tip, they will eventually wear and widen, which shows up first as extra paint consumption and fuzzy edges. Keep an eye on fan sharpness and replace accordingly.
The storage case is a small convenience. It keeps the tips, guard, and small pieces corralled, which speeds setup and teardown. Mine is lightweight and not something I’d stand on or toss off scaffolding; the hinge and latch are typical of included kit boxes. Treat it as a tidy organizer, not a jobsite-proof case.
Setup, pressure, and finish advice
A few practical notes from my runs:
- Start pressures moderate and bump up until the fan edge sharpens and tails disappear. Then stop. Extra pressure equals extra overspray.
- Keep your distance consistent—generally 12 inches—and let the fan width do the work. For a 415, that’s roughly an 8-inch band; a 517 gives you roughly 10 inches.
- Use a wet-edge plan with the 517 and 623 outdoors; their productivity is excellent, but they cover so fast that you must plan overlaps to avoid lap lines.
- For trim and doors, the 211 and 313 benefit from careful gun speed and tight trigger control. They can deliver a clean finish with minimal masking when handled deliberately.
Cleanup is straightforward. The reversible tips make quick work of minor clogs; for end-of-day, I flush the gun and hose, crack the guard, and wipe the tip and seal. The stainless and nylon surfaces rinse clean without fuss, and the tips drop back into the case ready for the next day.
Limitations and what the kit doesn’t do
A few trade-offs to keep in mind:
- Only one tip guard is included. Swapping tips is quick, but if you like to stage multiple guards setup for rapid changes, you’ll need extras.
- These appear to be standard-pressure tips, not low-pressure/FFLP variants. They atomize well, but they need appropriate pressure and will produce more overspray than low-pressure tips on fine-finish work.
- The included sizes don’t target ultra-fine coatings such as thin lacquers or conversion varnish in a cabinet shop. If you live in that world, you’ll want smaller-orifice, low-pressure tips.
- The case is a nice organizer, but it’s not rugged. If you’re hard on storage, consider transferring everything to a sturdier bin.
None of these is a dealbreaker for general residential and light commercial tasks, but they do define the kit’s sweet spot.
Value and who it’s for
Where this kit shines is breadth-for-the-dollar. Between the 211 and 623 you can cover almost any common home or exterior project with predictable patterns and clean fan edges. The two short extensions and the swivel joint add real-world comfort and reach without making the gun unwieldy. If you’re a homeowner who sprays a few times a year or a pro who wants a secondary set that lives in the truck, the Uddick kit makes sense. If you specialize in fine finishes and rely on very low-pressure tips, this kit can complement your setup for broader work but won’t replace your dedicated finishing tips.
The bottom line
After multiple projects, the Uddick airless accessory kit has done exactly what I needed: restore crisp spray patterns, extend reach, and reduce hose-induced wrist torque, all without leaks or finicky setup. The tips atomize reliably when pressure is set correctly, the extensions stay tight, and the swivel joint is a small ergonomic win. I’d like a second guard and a tougher case, and I wouldn’t choose these tips for ultra-fine low-pressure finishing. But for walls, ceilings, trim, exterior siding, and fences, this kit feels well judged.
Recommendation: I recommend this kit for homeowners and pros who want a practical, affordable refresh for their airless sprayer with a sensible spread of tip sizes, solid build quality, and useful ergonomics. It’s not a specialized finishing solution, but as a general-purpose accessory set, it’s an easy one to keep in the truck or on the shop shelf.
Project Ideas
Business
Mobile Deck and Fence Respray Service
Offer fast on-site staining and repainting for residential decks and fences. The full tip range covers from detailed railings (211) to large fence panels (623), extension rods reduce ladder use for speed and safety, and durable tips minimize downtime so you can complete more jobs per day.
Cabinet and Door Refinishing Micro-Contracting
Specialize in kitchen cabinet, door, and trim refinishing for homeowners and small landlords. The reversible nozzles let you switch colors quickly between rooms, the swivel joint improves access in tight kitchens, and the compact 9-piece set is easy to carry between jobs, lowering overhead.
Commercial Touch-Up & Maintenance Contracts
Secure recurring contracts with property managers to handle touch-ups, repainting lobbies, and manufacturing floor maintenance. The tungsten carbide tips deliver long life under repeated use, reducing replacement costs, while the storage box keeps inventory organized for repeat visits.
Tool Rental + Training Package
Rent the accessory kit alongside short on-site training sessions for DIY homeowners and small contractors. Teach nozzle selection, reversible-clean maintenance, and safe use of extension rods; offer replacement tips and tip guards as upsells to generate recurring revenue.
Event Branding and Pop-Up Mural Service
Provide fast turn-key spray-paint branding for events and retail pop-ups — rapid coverage with different tips speeds production and the reversible cleaning reduces color-change delays. Offer modular panels prepped and sprayed on-site to give clients custom backdrops with quick setup and teardown.
Creative
Large-Scale Indoor Mural Panels
Use the range of reversible nozzles to create layered murals on prefabricated wood or canvas panels — fine 211 tips for outlines and 517/623 for washes and backgrounds. The 30 cm extension rods let you spray evenly across tall panels without ladders, and the reversible cleaning design speeds color changes so you can work quickly between sections.
Refinished Furniture Series
Turn thrifted furniture into boutique pieces by using the 313 or 415 tips for smooth, even finishes and the 211 for delicate insets. The tungsten carbide tips and stainless handles give consistent atomization for a professional look, while the tip guards and storage box keep parts protected between jobs.
Outdoor Weatherproof Art & Planters
Spray-seal and decorate outdoor planters, benches, and sculptures using the heavy 623 tip for primers and thicker protective coatings. Corrosion-resistant stainless and nylon parts stand up to outdoor materials, and the swivel joint helps you reach awkward angles on three-dimensional pieces.
Layered Faux Finishes and Textures
Create faux-wood, stone, or textured plaster effects by switching nozzle sizes to vary droplet size and spray patterns. Use reversible tips to clear blockages while experimenting with stippling, dry-spray, and feathering techniques; extension rods let you maintain consistent distance for repeatable textures.