Possibly so, Dave, but you might also get
3. oil
4. dust
5. moisture

You do have to use canned air in short bursts or else it may freeze in the nozzle. I gather that what's called "air" is actually CO_2 which will freeze if you keep spraying it without a pause.

===Andrew


On 27/10/14 13:29, dave wrote:
I think you maybe better off getting a car inner tube and fill that with air.
1. get more air pressure
2. consistent pressure

I used one of those cans years & years ago with model air brushing and
found I had to have the can in hot (ish) water so i could spray  for more
than 5 mins without losing pressure etc.

ended up buy for $40.00 old fridge compressor driven by a drill (wasn't the
best experience), that was back in the early '80's

dave


On Sun, 26 Oct 2014 22:06:44 Andrew Packer wrote:
On 22/10/14 15:45, Nick Rout wrote:
Speaking of which, where can one buy compressed air cans these days?
My laptop needs a blow out I think.
The product you want is called CRC Air Brush.  You can contact CRC via
www.crc.co.nz.  I reckon we might have got our can at Blackwood-Paykel
(engineering supply shop) or possibly at one of the big DIY firms (Mitre
10, Bunnings etc).
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