Any tips on a homemade paint booth?
I have a regular box fan blowing IN to the booth, and filters allow air to exit ("positive pressure" booth). It works well for me. If you're pulling dirty air through the fan to make vapors exit, then yes, you need to be concerned with vapors. If you're pulling clean air through the fan as an inlet, not as much. I also have a filter on the inlet fan as well.
My makeshift booth works fine for me, for panel painting (it's 8 x 10 x 7 ft tall). The 3M overspray sheeting that I use is 15' wide and comes in a 450' roll for about $35. I just wrap the booth like a big present with a single sheet, floor, walls, and ceiling.
I also use a fresh air respirator system with a full hood. Don't want to breathe that junk, that's for sure.
So you have a booth built and then wrap that with the sheeting? Is that for contamination reasons? Do you use box fans for the exhaust? I would think a fan blowing IN would affect the spray coming out of the gun. Glad to hear I don't need an expensive compressor!! If this sounds like obvious stuff keep in mind I have never picked up a paint gun before...just want to get started.
I make a PVC frame box. I wrap that in plastic sheet.
Here's a picture. You can see (a) the box fan I use as an inlet, on the opposite wall (b) the filters that let air "out" (but overspray is captured), and (c) my fresh air pumps. If you look at the wall behind the air filters, you'll see a doggie door. I put my air pumps through the doggie door, and seal off the door area with towels. So the air I breathe is from outside the garage.
This works well for keeping contaminants out of paint, and from keeping overspray from getting all over my 'stuff' in the shop. The fan isn't blowing hard enough to cause problems, but it is blowing hard enough to 'inflate' the booth a little, and blow overspray towards the filters. The filters you see on the back wall were originally white, I was painting blue in the booth.
One thing to keep in mind, you WILL get junk in your paint (it's inevitable). How you handle it is how the job turns out. Me, I like to sand my clear down a day or two after spraying, and then re-clear it. I cut and buff the second spraying of clear, and it's nib free.
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1. You're pulling volatile fumes through a fan. This means you need an explosion proof motor, or you need to be running via a belt/pulley with the motor mounted outside of the fan area. Either way, it's more expensive than a box fan setup.
2. You're pulling overspray through a fan. So if you're using a filter in front of the fan inlet, it will clog up VERY quickly (we're talking home booth here), unless you build a large duct for the fan. Adds complication.
I have a filter on the output side of the inlet fan, which seems to do OK catching any debris from the outside environment. The outbound filters do fill up with overspray, but I run 2 or 3 of them at a time (for more surface area).
More than one way to skin a cat.
Not saying my way is right, I'm just saying what I do, and why I do it. 1. You're pulling volatile fumes through a fan. This means you need an explosion proof motor, or you need to be running via a belt/pulley with the motor mounted outside of the fan area. Either way, it's more expensive than a box fan setup.
More than one way to skin a cat.
Not saying my way is right, I'm just saying what I do, and why I do it.Oh ya theres def more than two ways to do it. I did it the way I mentioned for my first "DIY" booth about 6 years ago. painted 3 cars in there and never had an explosion.... I know it "COULD" depending on the consentration but I dont know anyone that has had a problem.
My house that i bought has a paint booth in the shop and it uses a non xproof motor with a belt/squirel cage mounted in the booth with floor mounted plenum and the original own has painted over 200 cars in it (started his body shop there) and never had a problem...
I guess what Im saying is if you have the choice you probably would happier with the air being slowly pulled acrross and outa the booth rather than forced in. the area near the fan will be very turbulent and if the booth isnt really clean you might end up pushing around alot of dust..
Now If you do pressureize it, pull the car in crank the fans up and leave the booth closed up with the fans on for a couple hours, then go in tack is off a couple times with about 15 mins between tackings. this will get the majority of the particles floating around off the car and pushed either through the fans or into a part of the booth that you wont really disturb while your painting.
you could also drop a chain or something metal from the frame of the car to the floor. this grounds the car and keeps it from getting all staticy (sometimes a problem in a plastic booth with ppl/air moving around..
I dont know if I would do it unless you get permission first....
Just something to keep in mind.
Next we put up plastic and borrowed some box fans. Then we put some air conditioning return filters on the downstream side so paint doesn't blow everywhere by your house or your neighbors cars. Just cracked the garage door high enough for the fans and blocked the rest.
Once we were getting started we watered down the floor so overspray would not stick. Then we turned off the gas water heater for safety.
Make sure you have a table and rags plus all of your supplies there with you inside. Once inside wear a resperator!! very important!!
Go slow and take your time, I had some really nice paint jobs come out of my garage and learned as I went along.
Hope this helps.





