The 90s. After the fall of the Berlin Wall and the end of the Soviet Union, some are already anticipating “the end of history”. Meanwhile, the world is reorganising itself.
Environmental regulations are becoming stricter. The paint industry is also facing new challenges: high-solids and water-based paints are gaining in importance, colour tones and effect paints are multiplying almost explosively. HVLP (High Volume Low Pressure) technology emerges.
As with many innovations, HVLP technology was initially met with scepticism. For SATA, the aim was not just to sell spray guns, but to build confidence in an entire product category.
Then came the year 1995. SATA launched the SATAjet NR 95, the third HVLP generation. It proved exactly how much potential the technology offered. On this basis, painters barely had to change their previous ways of working! It achieved a higher material throughput, while atomisation was even finer with a significantly larger fan. A small, green revolution.