I got one of their floor models too. I went back and forth between HF and a better one, but ~$160 (with a 25% off coupon) won.
Here are some of the things I learned:
- Absolutely do use caulk on all the seams when you assemble it.
- The light is junk. I had an old florescent shop light that I hung on the mounts inside. It is much better, but a halogen spot would be even better.
- I tried using it without a vacuum. It'll blow dust everywhere!! A lot of folks have complained about this, but think about it - You are pumping 8 - 12 CFM (depending on your compressor) of air into a box. All that air has to go somewhere. It will take any fine dust with it as it tries to leave the box. I tried to be clever and put a 6" diameter aftermarket air filter on the port on the back. It was nowhere near enough air flow. I could feel the gloves pressurize around my hands whenever I pulled the trigger and it still forced dust out any small opening. I even tried plugging a vacuum hose into the vacuum port and just putting the hose into a bucket of water. That still created pressure inside the box and splashed water all over the floor. I finally gave in and hooked up my vacuum. Using the glass media it does clog the filter pretty quickly. (I'm still working on a water "bong" type set up, but haven't figured out how to prevent sucking water into my vac. Stay tuned.) With a vac attached, I took the air filter off the back vent to keep the negative pressure from blowing up the gloves like balloons. It may be worth having a way to adjust the "****" to yield a slight negative pressure with the gun trigger pulled, but no more than necessary. That might help the water filter too. That is my next experiment.
- The pickup tube is junk and it turned out was not correctly attached to he vacuum hose. First I tried a piece of 1/2" copper with and el on top to keep the siphon hose from bending and kinking (see next item). Then I did a little searching and found a couple links to the theory of the pickup tube. I ended up with a second piece of 1/2" copper parallel to the actual pickup to let air down into the media. It really helped, but I may tweak the design a little more. You could get a pick up tube from TP also, but I had the copper pipe handy and it seems to work.
- The air and siphon hoses are also pretty poor. The air hose blew out near the gun and the siphon hose would kink and collapse. I replaced the air feed with a coil air hose I had lying around. It does restrict the flow a little but is really flexible and never kinks. I ordered a replacement siphon hose when I ordered a new gun from TP Tools.
- The gun is junk. Once I got the pickup working, the siphon hose would fill with media, but wouldn't come out of the gun. I got the cabinet to do 4 rusty wheels off a trailer. I spent hours (8 - 10) troubleshooting the cabinet and trying to clean the wheels. I tried both medium grit Black Diamond and fine grit glass. Ordering a new gun from TP (and a new siphon hose) fixed everything. The TP gun is really nice. I highly recommend that upgrade! Size the gun (small, medium or large) for your compressor capacity.
- Media does accumulate just inside the door and falls out when you open it. I used a piece of flashing as kind of a deflector on the inside of the door. It helps, but I still bang on the door before I open it. (Interestingly, TP sells a little tray to mount under the door to catch the media so I don't think the problem is unique to the HF unit.)
Summary:
If you have the money and want a blast cabinet you can hook up a use, I guess I'd look beyond HF. If you have a coupon, a little time and don't mind adding another $70 worth of parts, the HF cabinet (i.e. the box itself and once sealed up) is not too bad.