I could t stop thinking of Burt Reynolds and deliverance while watching this! Nice booth!
Having 2 inlet fans and 1 outlet fan plus a non-powered filtered outlet space will give pretty much the same throughput of air as well as keeping the booth itself at positive pressure meaning that no dust could creep in through any small gaps.
Nicely done and great video editing. (I appreciate "how to" vids that are straight to the point, and sped up.) Thank you for making this. It's very helpful.
Flammable paint fumes and vapors are now traveling through an non isolated electric motor and are remaining in this enclosed room. Not vented to the out doors. I can't believe how naive people are to not see how incredibly dangerous this is. A spark from the fans motor could cause a flash fire. This is how home's blow up and people wonder why LOL . he's been lucky, he's not painting a lot. Come on Rainford, re think you set up, and do it right, before you hurt your family or someone else, stupid enough to think this is a good idea. The deep south banjo picking fits the IQ .
nice idea, yea door was wide open lol, 2nd, the fans suck in and blow out, but it goes out back into your basement if im not correct? filling up the house ?
Yes, door was open only because of the video so you can see what was going on. Yes the exhaust was in the basement -- spraying non flammable materials there was not much smell and/or you can direct the exhaust out the buckhead door etc.
yeah you left the door open, but I guess we couldn't see otherwise
Nice work man.
Hi Bill - i notice you have filter housing on either side - do you have six fans in total, three on each side that suck out? thanks
Fans are only on the output side. On the intake side it's just a frame with filters to make sure the incoming are is clean. More info on the related blog post rainfordrestorations.com/2015/01/04/building-a-budget-spray-booth/
Are those explosion proof fans that stuff is very flammable
This is a great spray booth. I just wish I could see your parts list better, I need to build one badly.
***** Thank you. There was also a blog post that went with this video. You can find the post here: rainfordrestorations.com/2015/01/04/building-a-budget-spray-booth/ That should provide you with more info on how the parts (including a clickable image with that parts list) and a link in the body of the text to the instructions I used to build the booth.
Funny part is the opening door🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
the spray booth is taking contaminated air from the basement and exhausting it back into the basement, am I missing something here????
The input air normally is coming through the infeed filters. (Door was open only for the purposes of the video)
Great little booth for spraying acrylics. I sure wouldn't use those fans for any flammable type paints.
Yep 100% agree. In the disclaimer and notes in the related blog post I mention that this setup should only be used with non flammable materials rainfordrestorations.com/2015/01/04/building-a-budget-spray-booth/
@@bullitt1968gtYT But you have to make that super clear because a hell of a lot of people will spray flammables. A disclaimer doesn't stop stupid. Make another video explaining that.
My job should legally have a spray booth but doesn’t lol. We just spray it near a dock door and put one fan to push it out.
having the door open defeats the purpose of having filters and fans
He was just doing a demo - you wouldn't want your go-pro in an active paint booth, would you?
soulless one. No it doesn't, there are many professional spray booth models, with an "open face" design. ( like the one I own, for example ).
David marzolino
Smaller open face are for airbrushing like I use from time to time. In all my years I have yet to see an open face for full-on automotive paint jobs.
David marzolino
But if you are willing to share the brand of booth and model number that you have, I would have a look at it !
Very nice build! Thanks for sharing.