You're on a ladder. The wall is half done. The machine was spraying perfectly ten minutes ago — and now the pressure has dropped, the motor is running constantly, and the fan pattern is either thin, inconsistent, or completely gone. There's still paint in the bucket. Nothing visibly changed. And you have no idea what just happened.
This is the most common mid-job emergency in airless spray painting. And in over 90% of cases, the cause is one of six things — none of which requires a service centre trip. This guide walks through each one in the order you should check them, from the 60-second fixes to the 45-minute field repairs, so you can get back to spraying as fast as possible.
Partially Clogged Spray Tip — Check This in 30 Seconds
A partially clogged tip is the single most common cause of mid-job pressure drop, and it's also the fastest to diagnose and fix. The tip doesn't need to be fully blocked to cause pressure problems — a small piece of paint skin or debris partially obstructing the orifice creates back-pressure that makes the machine cycle constantly while dramatically reducing fan quality.
What it feels like: Pressure drops suddenly, fan becomes thin or streaky, motor starts cycling much faster than normal. Everything was fine, then it wasn't — often triggered by switching to a new bucket of paint or hitting a partially dried skin.
- Pressure was fine, then dropped suddenly mid-wall
- Fan pattern is thin, streaky, or split — not the usual clean fan
- Motor cycles constantly even with the trigger held fully open
- Increasing pressure doesn't restore the fan pattern
Fix It in 30 Seconds — The Tip Reversal
- Engage the trigger lock. Point the gun into a bucket.
- Rotate the tip 180° to the unclog position (the arrow on the RAC X tip points backward).
- Disengage the trigger lock. Pull the trigger for one full second — the reversed tip blasts the clog out backward into the bucket.
- Rotate the tip back to spray position. Pull the trigger. If pressure restores and the fan is clean — you're done.
- If the clog immediately returns: the paint isn't strained. Pour a new bucket through a mesh strainer before reloading.
If reversing fails twice, the clog is hardened or the orifice is damaged. Don't waste time soaking on the job — swap to a fresh tip from your bag and keep spraying. Soak the clogged tip in clean water or mineral spirits and clear it later. This is exactly why you keep a spare tip in your kit.
Clogged Gun Filter — The $8 Fix That Stops 40% of Pressure Calls
The SG2 spray gun has a mesh filter built into the handle between the hose connection and the tip. Its job is to catch debris before it reaches the tip orifice. When it gets coated with paint skin, sludge from the bottom of the bucket, or dried material — it restricts flow enough to cause exactly the same symptoms as worn pump packings. Most contractors don't check it nearly often enough.
Why it causes mid-job pressure loss: The filter works fine for the first bucket, then accumulates debris. Halfway through bucket two — especially if paint wasn't strained — the filter is partially blocked. Less paint reaches the tip per pump stroke. Pressure drops, motor cycles constantly to compensate, fan deteriorates.
- Pressure dropped gradually over 10–20 minutes, not suddenly
- Tip reversal didn't restore pressure — tip itself is clear
- Using thick paint, recycled paint, or paint from the bottom of an old bucket
- Haven't changed the gun filter since the start of the job
Fix It in 2 Minutes
- Relieve pressure completely: trigger lock on, switch to PRIME, trigger into bucket until no flow, turn OFF.
- Unscrew the gun handle filter housing (hand-tight — counter-clockwise). The mesh filter slides out.
- Hold the filter up to the light — if you can't see clearly through the mesh, it's the problem.
- Field clean: rinse under water and use a soft brush to remove debris. Takes 60 seconds. Reinstall.
- Better option: install a fresh filter from your bag. Full pressure restored instantly. Keep the clogged one for later cleaning.
Keep 10+ gun filters in the tool bag. They cost under $1 each. Swap to a fresh filter at the start of every new bucket of paint — not when pressure drops. Every 20 minutes of production spraying costs more in time than a gun filter costs in money. Never ration gun filters.
Blocked Inlet Strainer or Suction Tube Problem
The inlet strainer sits at the bottom of the suction tube inside the paint bucket. It filters debris before it enters the pump. When it gets coated with dried paint, sludge from the bucket bottom, or debris — it starves the pump of material on the intake stroke. The pump runs, strokes correctly, but doesn't draw enough paint to maintain pressure.
Mid-job specific trigger: You moved to a new bucket and the suction tube hit the bottom, blocking the strainer. Or you're using the last inch of paint in a 5-gallon bucket and the thick sludge at the bottom has clogged the mesh. Both cause sudden mid-job pressure loss.
- Pressure loss happened right after switching to a new bucket
- Sprayer primes fine with water but struggles with paint
- Working from the last 20% of a 5-gallon bucket — thick residue at the bottom
- Suction tube may be resting against the bucket wall or bottom, blocking flow
Fix It in 3 Minutes
- Relieve all pressure and turn the machine OFF.
- Remove the suction tube from the bucket. Look at the strainer at the bottom tip.
- Rinse under clean water. Use a soft brush (toothbrush) to remove debris from the mesh. Never use a wire brush — it destroys the mesh.
- Hold the strainer up to the light — you should see clearly through it. If not, it needs replacing, not just cleaning.
- Confirm the suction tube isn't resting against the bucket bottom or wall — it needs to hang freely in the paint to draw properly. If using the last inch of a 5-gallon bucket, strain the remaining paint into a clean container before reloading.
Worn Spray Tip — Pressure Doesn't Feel Right All Day
A worn tip doesn't fail all at once — it degrades gradually. The orifice oval-shapes over time, the fan width shrinks, and the pump works harder to compensate for the inconsistent restriction. This produces a slower version of pressure loss — the machine runs harder and harder over the course of a day until it's barely keeping up. Painters often think the pump is failing when the real issue is a tip that should have been replaced two jobs ago.
- Pressure feels "off" all day — machine works harder than normal
- Going through significantly more paint per room than usual
- Tailing at the edges of the fan even at maximum pressure
- Tip has been used for 2+ jobs without replacement
Outlet Check Valve Failure — Primes Fine, Pressure Collapses at Gun
When tip, gun filter, inlet strainer, and worn tip are all ruled out — and pressure still collapses — the problem has moved from the consumable layer into the fluid section. The outlet check valve (the upper check ball and seat) is next in the diagnostic sequence. This is the valve that directs pressurised paint into the hose on every upstroke. When it fails, pressure built by the pump bleeds backward into the pump body on every intake stroke instead of staying in the hose.
The key tell: The machine primes perfectly, draws paint normally, and builds pressure briefly — but the moment you trigger the gun, pressure collapses almost immediately and the motor starts cycling at maximum speed. This is different from a worn packing problem, where pressure was never fully achievable to begin with.
Confirm It's the Outlet Valve — The Hold Test
With the machine primed and in SPRAY mode, point the gun into a bucket and pull the trigger fully. Watch the motor.
- Motor runs constantly with trigger held open: outlet valve or packings — proceed to the release test below.
- Now release the trigger: if pressure holds for 15+ seconds before motor restarts, it's the outlet valve. If motor restarts within 5 seconds, it's the packings (Cause 6).
- Machine primes perfectly — no issue drawing paint
- Pressure at gun is weak or collapses immediately when trigger opens
- Motor cycles rapidly when spraying — rarely or never stalls to hold pressure
- Pressure holds well after trigger release (15+ seconds) — but collapses during spraying
Outlet Valve Replacement — Shop by Model
The upper check valve on Magnum-series machines. Accessible via the easy-access door — no pump removal required. Replaces the check ball, seat, and spring. 15-minute repair with a flathead screwdriver.
Shop 17J880On contractor-class machines, the outlet valve repair is similar but the access point differs. Consult your parts diagram for the exact location on your specific machine. Same OEM kit resolves the failure.
Find via DiagramWorn Pump Packings — The Root Cause When Nothing Else Explains It
If tip, gun filter, inlet strainer, worn tip, and outlet valve have all been ruled out — the packings have finally given up. Pump packings are the leather and UHMW-PE seals inside the fluid section that maintain pressure between the intake and the outlet. When they wear, paint bypasses internally on every stroke. The pump runs constantly, pressure never fully builds, and the spray pattern is weak and inconsistent regardless of pressure setting.
What's different about mid-job packing failure: Packings don't usually fail suddenly in the middle of a job. They degrade gradually over weeks and months. What happened "mid-job" is that the packings finally crossed the threshold where the internal bypass exceeds what the pump can compensate for. The warning signs were there — motor cycling faster than normal, slightly weaker pressure than before — but they built up slowly enough that you didn't notice until the machine couldn't keep up with the job.
Confirm It's the Packings — The Release Test
After priming the machine with clean water and switching to SPRAY mode:
- Remove the spray tip from the gun — no restriction at the outlet.
- Pull the trigger fully and hold it open into a bucket. Good packings stall the motor within 3–5 seconds as system pressure builds. Worn packings — motor never stalls.
- Release the trigger. Count seconds before the motor restarts. Good packings: 15–30 seconds. Worn packings: motor restarts within 5 seconds because pressure bleeds back internally instantly.
- Pressure has felt progressively weaker over several jobs — not sudden
- Motor cycles constantly — rarely or never holds pressure at rest
- TSL/Pump Armor wet cup empties faster than normal
- Faint trace of paint at the packing nut — stop immediately if you see this
- All other causes confirmed clear — outlet valve, strainer, tip, gun filter all check out
Pump Packing Kits — Shop by Machine Type
28-piece matched kit — leather throat packings, UHMW-PE V-packings, tungsten carbide intake seat, stainless check balls, Viton O-rings, gland nut, and break-in lubricant. This is the packing kit for every major Graco contractor machine. OEM only — aftermarket packing kits use inferior materials that fail at 150 hours vs 300+ hours for OEM leather and UHMW-PE.
Factory-sealed OEM
Complete embedded pump rebuild kit for Magnum homeowner machines. Includes pressure control, outlet valve, inlet valve, drain valve, and push prime kit — all failure points covered in one box. Best option for X5/X7 owners who find packings worn mid-season.
Shop 17V781If PRIME draws paint fine but SPRAY has no gun pressure and the 15-second hold test passes — it's the drain valve, not the packings. This kit fixes that specific failure on contractor machines. 20-minute repair.
Shop 235014Replace inlet valve seat at the same time as packing kit on high-hour contractor machines. A worn seat that passes today will cause a won't-prime failure 60 days after the rebuild. $28 OEM part that prevents a full second teardown.
Shop 239922When the cylinder bore is scored or the machine has been through 3+ packing kits — a fresh Endurance pump restores factory performance completely. No guesswork, no partial repair. Order and install, back to full production.
Shop 246428How to Make Sure This Doesn't Happen Mid-Job Again
Every cause of mid-job pressure loss in this guide is preventable. Here is the complete prevention routine — structured around what to do before, during, and after each job.
- ✓ Strain all paint through mesh strainer
- ✓ Inspect and replace gun filter
- ✓ Check and clean inlet strainer
- ✓ Inspect tip — measure fan width
- ✓ Check hose for cracks or bulges
- ✓ Run 15-second hold test on pump
- ✓ Fresh gun filter at every new bucket
- ✓ Never use the last inch of a bucket without straining
- ✓ Note motor cycling rate — faster = warning
- ✓ Keep spare tip in apron pocket
- ✓ Keep spare gun filter in apron pocket
- ✓ Flush completely with clean water
- ✓ Fill TSL cup (contractor) or run Pump Armor (homeowner)
- ✓ Log motor cycling time — shorter interval = schedule packing service
- ✓ Inspect tip — order replacement if worn
Every cause of pressure loss in this guide is fixable in under 45 minutes if you have the right parts on the truck. Here's the complete kit — approximate investment $320–$400, annual savings in idle crew time: thousands.
Frequently Asked Questions
Get the Parts That Fix It — Same Day from Houston
Factory-sealed OEM Graco packing kits, inlet valves, outlet valves, prime valves, spray tips, and gun filters — in stock and shipping same day on qualifying orders before 1pm CST. Call us at 713-931-4102 and we'll confirm the right part for your machine in under two minutes.