See...small tip and a bit high on the air pressure likely solves the problem. Just be ready, as you will have more paint laying down faster than you are used to once you set the tip and pressure. When right it will lay down with an orange peel at first, but the paint will be thick enough to flow out into itself within 5-10 seconds. So it will always lay with the orange peel, but the key is that it should be just wet enough to smooth out right after.
If you lay a stripe and then watch closely, you will see it flow out smooth. If it doesn't, you can make another quick pass immediately to give it a bit more volume to aid the flow. Also, if don't see if flow out...then you need to up the paint control and/or slow your speed across the panel.
When you get just the amount to get it to flow out...then do NOT be tempted to add more!! That's when you get the runs (no pun intended). I can't tell you how many times I had a dry spray...then upped the amount and resprayed, so it looked So much better!!...and then thought, if it worked once, lets add some more!?!...only to get a huge slow motion run!! Bummer. So, just enough to get it to flow, but not more than that until you wait your 10-15 minutes between coats.
Good lighting is really important...and I find more so as my eyes get worse. I used to be able to see a light spray on , say, an edge. Now days I have to study the tricky areas up close with coke-bottle lenses to make sure I didn't miss a spot. Getting old sucks...but it's better than the alternative?!?
You are almost to the point of bringing it all together, so don't think you can't have a great finish...look how far your bodywork came in a short time!!
Oh, a couple more things that may, may not help:
My personal "comfort speed" when spraying is about 1 foot every second. So if I start on a 3 foot door, I start the spray about 6 inches off the panel, once I hit the panel I could count thousand 1, thousand 2, thousand 3, and I am off the panel and stop the spray about 6 inches after. I pause for time to think about the next line, and then repeat in the opposite direction...spray, 1, 2, 3, past and release. This is just to give you a reference until you find your own comfort speed.
I usually start spraying too thin (since runs are worse in my mind than orange peel), so after the first pass, look at your line and see if it is flowing correctly. If it is I keep going. If not, I dial up the paint...re-run that pass faster (since it already has paint), and then re-check the flow. Run the next adjacent pass, study it, and so on...until you are happy the paint is going down just thick enough to flow, but no more.
You do have a decent "spread" between flow and run with most paints. And that is fortunate! Many times you can't help doubling a pass over an area, especially when some intricate body lines come together. The area around the rear bumpers comes to mind...you have to spray in a couple different directions to get everything, and therefore some of the passes end up over-lapping. I'd estimate the "spread" between flow and run is about half an average pass, if the flow and speed is right. So I double my arm speed over the intricate areas to allow for the overlap...and often lay a couple fast passes rather one normal. Hope that makes sense?!?
Anyway...enough for now...Good luck and Godspeed John Glenn!