I'm not telling anyone to do this. I'm just relating what I am doing.
Remember, nothing in the way of equipment listed here is in any way approved
for medical use.

Compressor- a commonly available small OIL-LESS air compressor; these things
are NOISY. Cost around $150. I bought the smallest & lightest I could find
at the time, since then I've seen a smaller one at Lowe's.

Regulator- a commonly available subcompact air pressure line regulator.
These regulators have trouble being reliably adjustable at below 20psi.
These usually come on the compressor these days.

Hose- standard black vinyl, red rubber, pvc or urethane air hose. Cheapest
is all I need for this. I'm using the one that came with the compressor.

Airbrush- Harbor Freight airbrush kit model 1500. Cost me $25 with shipping.
HF is terminally slow with the cheapest shipping option. It took two weeks
to get here and their distribution center is 100 miles away.

Standard brass 1/4" quick disconnect fittings between the regulator and main
hose, and between the main hose and the small airbrush hose in the kit.

The kit comes with two glass bottles, I use the smaller one. The metal "cup"
is useless for this purpose. Save the larger bottle in case the small one
gets broken.

At 15 psi, this airbrush puts a out a fine mist that appears to be every bit
as fine as the mist form the nebulizer I've used for years. The main
difference is that it is pressurized. A nebulizer chamber atomizes the
liquid but disperses the pressure, so there is no pressure into the mouth.
Disadvantage- makes me want to resist breathing it;
Advantage- would be good if breathing were difficult.
20 psi is too much. This is not for a child to use unless an adult is
controlling the trigger. There is an adjustment at the nose of the airbrush,
keep it tight for finest mist.

At 15psi, I have the option of closing my mouth around it or holding it out
of my mouth and breathing the mist.

The really big advantage is that this arrangement will conserve both the CS
mixture and the air used. The compressor won't run nearly as much as with a
nebulizer chamber since I am shutting the air off after every breath. This
would be particularly advantageous if hooked it to a bottle of oxygen (with
an oxy regulator!!!). If I have to stop, I don't have to get up and cut the
air off, but of course that could be fixed on a nebulizer with a valve
in-line close to me.

Speaking of oxygen, you can buy small tanks with some metal cutting torch
outfits. I came upon mine, brand new, because someone traded in one of those
tanks for a larger one at my local welding shop. I bought the tank for $50.

The trigger is a button on top that has a double action. You must depress it
and pull it back to get full fog. If you don't pull it back you're only
getting air.

This was worth doing to me, but then I love playing with this kinda stuff.
Guy Thing.

Daddybob


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