Campbell Hausfeld DH380000AV Pressure-Feed Spray Gun
Campbell Hausfeld – click on the image below for more information.
- Pressure feed design sprays low to high viscosity materials
- Ball burnished finish allows for easy clean up
Campbell Hausfeld
All purpose, bleeder type gun for a variety of materials. Internal mix, pressure feed for heavy materials. External mix, pressure feed for latex paints. Easy to clean. Adjustable fluid and air control. 1 quart cup. Operating pressure 20 45 P.S.I., air requirements are 3.5 to 5 SCFM. .
Campbell Hausfeld DH380000AV Pressure-Feed Spray Gun
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Welding with a Campbell Hausfeld 70 A. stick welder
First vid. If anyone actually watches this, let me know what you think. thanks!
Campbell’s Dwarf Hamster Colors
One of the big things that makes the Campbell’s dwarf hamster especially interesting is the array of colors and patterns this guy comes in. This species is available in more colors and patterns than any of the other dwarf hamster species. The reason for this is partly due to their history and partly due to their breeding characteristics.
One main reason the Campbell’s dwarf hamster has many different colors is because of this guy’s long history in captivity. This hamster was first discovered in 1905 by the man who this species was named after, Thomas Campbell. It took a while for this hamster to reach the western world and become popular as a pet. One of this specie’s first stops was Moscow, where it was held in captivity primarily for research purposes.
It wasn’t until the 1960s when they were first brought to the United Kingdom through the London Zoological Society.
Later on in the 1960s they were being bred in the United Kingdom but this breeding was mainly for scientific purposes. It actually wasn’t until the 1980s, about 80 years after they were first discovered, that they finally become widely available as pets.
For those of you that don’t know much about breeding, you might not understand how these many years spent in captivity has lead to the many colors of their coats. Here is a very basic explanation. While these guys are in captivity, their survival and reproduction can be controlled. If an owner wanted to have more hamsters with stripes, he could simply choose a mom and dad hamster that both had stripes, breed them, and as a result, he’d have a bunch of hamster babies that would have stripes like mommy and daddy.
It is based on this concept that over time breeders were able to bring out so many different traits and patterns that has lead to the Campbell’s dwarf hamsters we have today.
This process was accelerated by the fact that these hamsters can be bred very frequently (you can have generations of these guys in just a few years).
The colors of the Campbell’s dwarf hamster include gray, sandy brown, cinnamon, white, blue, and black. They are usually a mix of these colors and with different patterns such as patches, spots, and stripes.

