Cleaner coverage without the brush marks
If you have ever fought streaks, roller texture, or uneven edges, this sprayer is aimed at that exact problem. The 750W motor and HVLP setup are designed to move paint in a controlled mist, so large DIY surfaces can be coated with less visible overlap.
For home renovation work, that matters more than raw speed alone because a steadier fan pattern usually gives a more even finish. The Prostormer name also carries weight in the AliExpress UK tool space, where the brand is known for practical, specification-led kits that focus on usable output rather than flashy extras.
What 750W and 30,000rpm mean on a wall
The listed 750W input power and 30,000rpm no-load speed suggest enough force for common household coatings, from primers to standard paint mixes. In practice, that should help reduce the stop-start rhythm that makes hand painting tiring on doors, fences, and cabinets.
This is not a cordless unit, so the mains-powered design is better suited to a fixed workshop, garage, or renovation zone than quick outdoor touch-ups. If you want uninterrupted spraying over a full afternoon, the wired format is the more dependable choice, and the next detail explains why the cup size matters.
1200ml cup capacity for fewer refills

The 1200ml paint cup is one of the most useful parts of the specification because it reduces interruptions on medium jobs. That capacity is large enough to keep you moving across panels, shelving, or a feature wall before you need to stop and reload.
For users working on furniture or trim, the bigger reservoir can also mean more consistent output because you are not constantly changing the paint level. It is a small advantage that becomes noticeable once you compare it with compact sprayers that need frequent topping up, so nozzle control becomes the next question.
Four nozzle sizes and flow control for different finishes
The four nozzle sizes give the sprayer more flexibility than a basic single-tip model, which is useful when material thickness changes from project to project. A 2.6mm nozzle is generally better suited to heavier coatings, while the flow control helps you tune output instead of forcing one fixed spray rate.
That matters when you move from rough timber to smoother surfaces, because too much output can create drips and too little can leave a dry, patchy coat. Users who want a finer finish on furniture will likely spend a little time testing the pattern first, and that leads directly to the question of where this tool fits best.
Best suited to home renovation, not delicate detailing

This sprayer is built for home DIY, car panels, and general renovation work rather than ultra-fine art finishing. The pressure feed and HVLP format are a strong match for broad, practical jobs where speed and coverage matter more than showroom-level precision.
For a weekend user, that makes it easier to justify than a more complex pro-grade system that demands higher setup discipline. Customers who have used similar sprayers often focus on the time saved on fences and walls, but the real benefit comes from matching the tool to the coating and the surface, which is where setup discipline matters most.
What to check before the first fill
Because this is a mains electric paint gun, getting the mix right is more important than forcing the trigger harder. Thin the paint according to the coating type, test on cardboard first, and adjust the flow before moving onto the final surface.
The CE and GS/CE certification listing adds a basic layer of reassurance for household use, while the customised specification suggests the unit is positioned as a flexible tool rather than a one-size-fits-all package. If you want a sprayer that can cover real DIY territory without moving into bulky compressor territory, the specification set is worth a close look.

















