I thought you guys might get a kick out this... Essentially, we needed to paint a little roadster inside the new Atomic shop. The problem? We didn't have a paint booth and ...
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That's pretty good. If you wanted to make it a down draft booth, you could add 4" PVC pipe around the inside of the booth and plumb it into a box fan.
Thats a gutsy design seeing that those fans are not explosion proof like Jenny fans or similar ones.
Car looks good though.
http://www.jennyproducts.com/FanExplosionProof.html

It seems I remember about a car magazine doing to story about "the best paint job", everyone could enter their car or truck. The guy that won it I think was from Rocky Mount,NC area. The magazine asked about coming over to see how he painted his car. They arrived and he led them out his back door of his mobile home and showed him the backyard. No shop, no shelter, just the yard. He told them he cut his grass short, bagged it then wet the yard down with a sprinkler and did the work when it wasn't wendy. If he got a bug in it, he just let it dry and sanded/spotted the primer again. He did the same with the paint. If a bug got in it, he let it dry and sanded it out and spot painted until he had several coats of paint on then just buffed it out slick.
I've done that a few times too. A very light breeze is best. A good urethane enamel with the proper reducer and hardener flashes almost instantly so there's really not that much chance of contamination.
Bright sunshine is great for spraying and being outside helps to keep fumes out of your respiratory system and from concentrating into explosive levels.
Somethng that scares me about makeshift booths is the possibility of static electricity buildup on plastic sheeting.

We are lucky to be alive.

We were almost crazy enough to do that... But at the end of the day, this is a traditional hot rod paint job and we didn't want to go to overboard.
at the opposite end with filters as well. If done right, you'll end up with a positive pressure chamber so any air leaks will push dirt *out* and not
It's still a good idea to supply filters on the exhaust to minimize overspray escaping into the rest of the shop.
Using the fan to pressurize the booth provides several advantages;
The air drawn into the booth is filtered and the booth is run at a positive pressure. Even a whole Depot worth of duct tape can't perfectly seal a home grown spray booth. When you're using a fan as an exhaust, you're making the assumption that all the air entering the booth came through that filter when in fact in came in through every breach in the enclosure, bringing **** and dust with it.
This should be read again. Just out of curiosity did you guys open the link to paint booth basics I listed here? The air is drawn in under positive pressure, this would be blowing it in. There is a huge confusion here between a clean room and a paint booth. a paint booth is negative pressure. You want to draw fumes out in an orderly fashion. A room under pressure forces fumes everywhere in the room and doesnt clear.The air drawn into the booth is filtered and the booth is run at a positive pressure.
This should be read again. Just out of curiosity did you guys open the link to paint booth basics I listed here? The air is drawn in under positive pressure, this would be blowing it in. There is a huge confusion here between a clean room and a paint booth. a paint booth is negative pressure. You want to draw fumes out in an orderly fashion. A room under pressure forces fumes everywhere in the room and doesnt clear.
Its all about that, start at the beginning.Yup I read it again, and it doesn't state anything about a proper paint booth needing to be a positive or negative pressure
