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frontpageSkillful_Pickle | Staff posted Feb 23, 2026 04:05 PM
frontpageSkillful_Pickle | Staff posted Feb 23, 2026 04:05 PM

Prime Members: Tilswall Electric Ultra-Light Paint Sprayer w/ 4 Nozzles (1000ml)

+ Free Shipping

$20

$55

63% off
Amazon
17 Comments 9,469 Views
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Deal Details
TIANWAN via Amazon has for Prime Members: Tilswall Electric Ultra-Light Paint Sprayer w/ 4 Nozzles (1000ml) on sale for $35.99 - $16 (apply promo code JYFNORVT at checkout) = $19.99. Shipping is free.
  • Note: Promo codes are typically for one-time use and don't always apply seamlessly. If you run into this issue, refresh the page, re-enter the code, or revisit the cart page.
Thanks to staff member Skillful_Pickle for finding this deal.

Features:
  • Effortlessly assemble within seconds
  • Compatible with multiple paint types, including water-based paints such as emulsion, acrylic paints for walls and furniture, or oil-based paints including gloss, semi-gloss, and enamel finishes
  • Features three spray patterns (horizontal/vertical/elliptical) and four nozzle sizes (1.0mm/1.5mm/1.5mm/2.0mm
  • Includes: 1x spray gun, 4x nozzles, 1x viscosity cup, 1x cleaning brush, 1x cleaning needle, 5x 190-micron filter paper

Editor's Notes

Written by megakimcheelove | Staff
  • Rated 4.3 out of 5 (58 global ratings)
  • Don't have Amazon Prime? Students can get a free 6-Month Amazon Prime trial with free 2-day shipping, unlimited video streaming & more.
  • If you're not a student, there's also a free 1-Month Amazon Prime trial available.
  • Please see the original post for additional details & give the WIKI and additional forum comments a read for helpful discussion. 

Original Post

Community Notes
About the Poster
Deal Details
Community Notes
About the Poster
TIANWAN via Amazon has for Prime Members: Tilswall Electric Ultra-Light Paint Sprayer w/ 4 Nozzles (1000ml) on sale for $35.99 - $16 (apply promo code JYFNORVT at checkout) = $19.99. Shipping is free.
  • Note: Promo codes are typically for one-time use and don't always apply seamlessly. If you run into this issue, refresh the page, re-enter the code, or revisit the cart page.
Thanks to staff member Skillful_Pickle for finding this deal.

Features:
  • Effortlessly assemble within seconds
  • Compatible with multiple paint types, including water-based paints such as emulsion, acrylic paints for walls and furniture, or oil-based paints including gloss, semi-gloss, and enamel finishes
  • Features three spray patterns (horizontal/vertical/elliptical) and four nozzle sizes (1.0mm/1.5mm/1.5mm/2.0mm
  • Includes: 1x spray gun, 4x nozzles, 1x viscosity cup, 1x cleaning brush, 1x cleaning needle, 5x 190-micron filter paper

Editor's Notes

Written by megakimcheelove | Staff
  • Rated 4.3 out of 5 (58 global ratings)
  • Don't have Amazon Prime? Students can get a free 6-Month Amazon Prime trial with free 2-day shipping, unlimited video streaming & more.
  • If you're not a student, there's also a free 1-Month Amazon Prime trial available.
  • Please see the original post for additional details & give the WIKI and additional forum comments a read for helpful discussion. 

Original Post

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Top Comments

HeyGuysChrisFixHere
447 Posts
94 Reputation
I bought 2 of these last time they were on sale a few months ago for $20 and it works surprisingly well. I PlastiDip'ed my car's emblems and tail lights and didn't thin it at all even though everyone told me I had to thin it by 25%-50% or it would never work with any cheap airless sprayer. This actually produces a pretty consistent fan pattern and atomizes droplets fairly well, much better than you'd expect for its normal price of $55 anyway. The PlastiDip was nice and smooth with no orange peel effect which is easy to achieve as long as you always lay down full wet coats and don't spray light misting coats like you would with permanent paint as they require totally different methods. Obviously this is not as good/powerful/consistent-spray-pattern as a $400 Wagner or a $800 Graco but its like 80% as good for 3%-5% the price so definitely worth it to me. This just has significantly more overspray than a high quality sprayer would create. It should work decently well for most thin to medium liquids such as stains, thin paints, and maybe water based latex if you thin it with some water since latex is usually way thicker than the PlastiDip I sprayed. It sprays smooth enough for the average DIY home applications but if you need really smooth and even spray pattern for something like repainting a car then you'd probably want to get a $500-$1000 Wagner or Graco. I upgraded to the Tilswall Shark 800 which I got on another SlickDeals front page sale for $40 shortly after I got this model and the Shark 800 sprays almost equivalent to a Wagner that costs 6x the price and it comes with 3 different nozzle diameters. I repainted my entire car with permanent color match paint as well as 2K clearcoat that a local car paint shop mixed for me and I sprayed it using the Shark 800 with smallest nozzle and it turned out very nice. It just doesn't have as much adjustability to vary the air output or fan width as a Graco has, but it was definitely good enough to give me a finish that looks OEM and I did it with a $40 sprayer lol! I'll bet this $20 one could probably do it too but it would leave a few noticeable droplets here and there that you'd have to sand out between coats. It would also take maybe 1/3 longer since this one has a smaller fan spray width than the Shark 800 does.

17 Comments

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Feb 23, 2026 04:41 PM
927 Posts
Joined Nov 2012
darksiderisingFeb 23, 2026 04:41 PM
927 Posts
Low quantity of reviews and all the product images being AI or CG renderings doesn't give confidence in this being a quality product.
1
3
Feb 23, 2026 07:03 PM
69 Posts
Joined Dec 2025
BoastfulStar900Feb 23, 2026 07:03 PM
69 Posts
Quote from darksiderising :
Low quantity of reviews and all the product images being AI or CG renderings doesn't give confidence in this being a quality product.
That's disappointing.
1
Pro
Yesterday 02:46 AM
1,835 Posts
Joined Dec 2007
AssaultLife
Pro
Yesterday 02:46 AM
1,835 Posts
Would this work for fence staining
Yesterday 03:53 AM
264 Posts
Joined Jul 2012
tul9033Yesterday 03:53 AM
264 Posts
Quote from AssaultLife :
Would this work for fence staining
Yes, shouldn't be a problem. There is a consistency cup to get the thickness right.
Yesterday 05:31 AM
4,151 Posts
Joined Mar 2015
CoolDealFinderYesterday 05:31 AM
4,151 Posts
Quote from AssaultLife :
Would this work for fence staining
Exactly my question!
Yesterday 05:56 AM
4 Posts
Joined May 2019
Dama417Yesterday 05:56 AM
4 Posts
I wonder if this well worked for DIY small beater car
1
Yesterday 06:26 AM
447 Posts
Joined Oct 2017
HeyGuysChrisFixHereYesterday 06:26 AM
447 Posts

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank HeyGuysChrisFixHere

Quote from AssaultLife :
Would this work for fence staining
I bought 2 of these last time they were on sale a few months ago for $20 and it works surprisingly well. I PlastiDip'ed my car's emblems and tail lights and didn't thin it at all even though everyone told me I had to thin it by 25%-50% or it would never work with any cheap airless sprayer. This actually produces a pretty consistent fan pattern and atomizes droplets fairly well, much better than you'd expect for its normal price of $55 anyway. The PlastiDip was nice and smooth with no orange peel effect which is easy to achieve as long as you always lay down full wet coats and don't spray light misting coats like you would with permanent paint as they require totally different methods. Obviously this is not as good/powerful/consistent-spray-pattern as a $400 Wagner or a $800 Graco but its like 80% as good for 3%-5% the price so definitely worth it to me. This just has significantly more overspray than a high quality sprayer would create. It should work decently well for most thin to medium liquids such as stains, thin paints, and maybe water based latex if you thin it with some water since latex is usually way thicker than the PlastiDip I sprayed. It sprays smooth enough for the average DIY home applications but if you need really smooth and even spray pattern for something like repainting a car then you'd probably want to get a $500-$1000 Wagner or Graco. I upgraded to the Tilswall Shark 800 which I got on another SlickDeals front page sale for $40 shortly after I got this model and the Shark 800 sprays almost equivalent to a Wagner that costs 6x the price and it comes with 3 different nozzle diameters. I repainted my entire car with permanent color match paint as well as 2K clearcoat that a local car paint shop mixed for me and I sprayed it using the Shark 800 with smallest nozzle and it turned out very nice. It just doesn't have as much adjustability to vary the air output or fan width as a Graco has, but it was definitely good enough to give me a finish that looks OEM and I did it with a $40 sprayer lol! I'll bet this $20 one could probably do it too but it would leave a few noticeable droplets here and there that you'd have to sand out between coats. It would also take maybe 1/3 longer since this one has a smaller fan spray width than the Shark 800 does.
3

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Today 12:07 AM
103 Posts
Joined Oct 2004
imbatman1982Today 12:07 AM
103 Posts
I bought one last time and have used it once. It worked pretty good especially for the price. It is really loud though.
Today 12:07 AM
1,029 Posts
Joined Feb 2010
ZenNutsToday 12:07 AM
1,029 Posts
Bought something similar to paint a louver door.

I thinned the paint plus I added flow-enhancing additive to be on the safe side. It works fine but the head get very hot and I had to take breaks even though it's only one regular sized door. With stain you may not even have to thin it. Just take it slow and you should be fine. The price is almost use once and done but I cleaned mine well and am holding on to it for the next project.

I probably wont' use something like this for big job like wall painting for small projects it's fine.
Today 12:59 AM
1,170 Posts
Joined Apr 2023
IndigoTent3072Today 12:59 AM
1,170 Posts
I'm seeing the 600 ml size for $35 and the 1000 ml size for $55
Today 03:44 AM
6 Posts
Joined Nov 2008
Tt2chainToday 03:44 AM
6 Posts
Quote from HeyGuysChrisFixHere :
I bought 2 of these last time they were on sale a few months ago for $20 and it works surprisingly well. I PlastiDip'ed my car's emblems and tail lights and didn't thin it at all even though everyone told me I had to thin it by 25%-50% or it would never work with any cheap airless sprayer. This actually produces a pretty consistent fan pattern and atomizes droplets fairly well, much better than you'd expect for its normal price of $55 anyway. The PlastiDip was nice and smooth with no orange peel effect which is easy to achieve as long as you always lay down full wet coats and don't spray light misting coats like you would with permanent paint as they require totally different methods. Obviously this is not as good/powerful/consistent-spray-pattern as a $400 Wagner or a $800 Graco but its like 80% as good for 3%-5% the price so definitely worth it to me. This just has significantly more overspray than a high quality sprayer would create. It should work decently well for most thin to medium liquids such as stains, thin paints, and maybe water based latex if you thin it with some water since latex is usually way thicker than the PlastiDip I sprayed. It sprays smooth enough for the average DIY home applications but if you need really smooth and even spray pattern for something like repainting a car then you'd probably want to get a $500-$1000 Wagner or Graco. I upgraded to the Tilswall Shark 800 which I got on another SlickDeals front page sale for $40 shortly after I got this model and the Shark 800 sprays almost equivalent to a Wagner that costs 6x the price and it comes with 3 different nozzle diameters. I repainted my entire car with permanent color match paint as well as 2K clearcoat that a local car paint shop mixed for me and I sprayed it using the Shark 800 with smallest nozzle and it turned out very nice. It just doesn't have as much adjustability to vary the air output or fan width as a Graco has, but it was definitely good enough to give me a finish that looks OEM and I did it with a $40 sprayer lol! I'll bet this $20 one could probably do it too but it would leave a few noticeable droplets here and there that you'd have to sand out between coats. It would also take maybe 1/3 longer since this one has a smaller fan spray width than the Shark 800 does.
I like your YT videos
Today 06:29 AM
19 Posts
Joined Mar 2017
cbrulee818Today 06:29 AM
19 Posts
Was thinking of getting one of these to try spraying chocolate onto my baked sculptures.
Today 09:05 AM
213 Posts
Joined Jun 2008
mad212Today 09:05 AM
213 Posts
Quote from HeyGuysChrisFixHere :
I bought 2 of these last time they were on sale a few months ago for $20 and it works surprisingly well. I PlastiDip'ed my car's emblems and tail lights and didn't thin it at all even though everyone told me I had to thin it by 25%-50% or it would never work with any cheap airless sprayer. This actually produces a pretty consistent fan pattern and atomizes droplets fairly well, much better than you'd expect for its normal price of $55 anyway. The PlastiDip was nice and smooth with no orange peel effect which is easy to achieve as long as you always lay down full wet coats and don't spray light misting coats like you would with permanent paint as they require totally different methods. Obviously this is not as good/powerful/consistent-spray-pattern as a $400 Wagner or a $800 Graco but its like 80% as good for 3%-5% the price so definitely worth it to me. This just has significantly more overspray than a high quality sprayer would create. It should work decently well for most thin to medium liquids such as stains, thin paints, and maybe water based latex if you thin it with some water since latex is usually way thicker than the PlastiDip I sprayed. It sprays smooth enough for the average DIY home applications but if you need really smooth and even spray pattern for something like repainting a car then you'd probably want to get a $500-$1000 Wagner or Graco. I upgraded to the Tilswall Shark 800 which I got on another SlickDeals front page sale for $40 shortly after I got this model and the Shark 800 sprays almost equivalent to a Wagner that costs 6x the price and it comes with 3 different nozzle diameters. I repainted my entire car with permanent color match paint as well as 2K clearcoat that a local car paint shop mixed for me and I sprayed it using the Shark 800 with smallest nozzle and it turned out very nice. It just doesn't have as much adjustability to vary the air output or fan width as a Graco has, but it was definitely good enough to give me a finish that looks OEM and I did it with a $40 sprayer lol! I'll bet this $20 one could probably do it too but it would leave a few noticeable droplets here and there that you'd have to sand out between coats. It would also take maybe 1/3 longer since this one has a smaller fan spray width than the Shark 800 does.
Did you use the plastidip in the gallon can and what size tip did you use?
Last edited by mad212 February 25, 2026 at 02:10 AM.
Today 01:38 PM
160 Posts
Joined Nov 2007
Maliki2Today 01:38 PM
160 Posts
Would this work for redoing our teens bedroom. She messed it up pretty bad and I'm looking for something easy to paint with.

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Today 02:43 PM
318 Posts
Joined Feb 2018
JarredS8454Today 02:43 PM
318 Posts
Quote from Maliki2 :
Would this work for redoing our teens bedroom. She messed it up pretty bad and I'm looking for something easy to paint with.
Probably, but indoors spraying means you need to tape off and protect other surfaces well.
I did my research on these cheap sprayers and I saw a lot of "overspray" comments. Additionally the reservoir is relatively small so expect a lot of refills for any sized bedroom vs say a cabinet door.
They also don't last long so like one commenter said, you might treat this as a disposable tool. I

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