Ep 2: Inside the Airless Line -- How Tecnover Engineers Precision Into Every Spray Painting Sprayer

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Tecnover

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There's a particular kind of pride that comes from making one thing exceptionally well for forty years, rather than many things adequately. Tecnover's airless paint sprayers are where that philosophy is most visible — not in a single flagship product, but in a full lineup engineered to match the exact scale of the job in front of you.

The range starts with the Testarossa Superquattromila, a practical, easy-to-use pump built for small and medium surfaces — the kind of unit a carpenter or interior painter reaches for daily. From there, the lineup scales upward in deliberate steps: the Supercinquemila for medium and large surfaces, the Superottomila with its flanged motor for rapid voltage changes, and the Superdiecimila, powerful enough to handle epoxy resin flooring and asbestos encapsulation work. At the top end, the Superquindicimila and Superventimila are built for large-scale jobs — two operators working simultaneously, exterior work with quartz paints, and applications demanding serious throughput.

What ties the entire range together is a detail that sounds small until you're the one using it: the Airless Revolver. Instead of manually repositioning the spray fan, operators can rotate it with a simple flick — a design choice that saves time across a long workday and reflects Tecnover's broader belief that professional equipment shouldn't force painters to fight their tools.

For jobs off the grid, Tecnover also builds petrol-engine variants of its Supercinquemila, Superdiecimila, and Superquindicimila models — full autonomy for sites without reliable power access. And for the nautical sector specifically, the Marine M12 was engineered for antifouling paints, gelcoats, and epoxy resins, addressing a niche that generic sprayers simply aren't built to handle.

Every unit in the lineup is designed, assembled, and tested in Italy, consistent with the standard the company has held since Francesco Ricotti and Lorenza Cera founded it in 1984. It's a range built less around chasing the widest possible catalog and more around covering every real-world surface, material, and working condition a professional might actually face — from a small interior touch-up to a large-scale industrial floor.

For contractors, carpenters, and painting professionals comparing equipment, that range of purpose-built options — backed by four decades of manufacturing consistency — is what separates a tool built to sell from one built to last. Explore the full range of Airless Paint Sprayers and find the model matched to your job.