"It's all very easy to do, nothing really special. Just a little bit of wood work, and for a guy who is a little bit handy like you, that should be no problem." Dang man teaching us and making us feel good about ourselves? You fuckin' lad!
Hey Steve. Thanks for another great video. I have enjoyed many of your videos about your Massey, Old Rusty, and other DIY projects - but well, who dosent like seeing other people work - 😂. You always make it look so easy and that inspires me. And a very nice place you have to. Looking forward to see more videos from you, so keep up the good work. 🙂 Best regards Jimmi, Denmark
Zoals Akieba zei is overdruk beter om het stof buiten te houden, voor de verwarming, misschien met warme lucht? En de verf vooraf op dezelfde temperatuur natuurlijk 😊👍goed bezig
TXS for the comments, you are right, at this point I am having only one fan on the exhaust, so that will create a vacuum/ under-pressure which is more dust prone unless all is very well sealed. I might add an intake fan and regulate the speed between the two so I can create a over pressure...
you could have saved some money on the walls by using polysheet instead of the osb boards. also you want to pull fresh air from the front say and exhaust from the rear, also you want to exhaust from high up to remove the overspray from the air before it falls into the wet paint. using a active carbon filter on the exhaust is also a must with a pre filter of course. i guess from the sounds of it your going to be using 2k paints which with a fast hardener and rocket will air dry so no need to use heat, infra heaters only heat surfaces and not the air i believe so they will need to close to panels in order to heat them. there are a few ways of getting around not having heat in a booth like pre heating panels before you paint them (ive painted vans in a booth with no heat and just placed a diesel heater inside the van for a while before painting in order to heat the panels up) but your best option is to place the paint in some warm water before using it (this thins the paint down without the need for thinners making it flow out better) and the use of U-POL rocket or other brand paint accelerator will help the paint dry faster, im planning on building a booth for painting a project of mine and im gonna go without heat. keeping the floor surfaces wet will also help to keep the dust down. as for lighting you want as many lights as you can get hold of in there, put them on the ceiling and around the outside walls to keep shadows to a minimum. im not sure if you use social media or anything like that but im always happy to have a chat and share the knowledge i have on the subject of painting
Ross l , realy helpfull tips. Txs so much. In terms of filters, that is indeed what i plan. Except the carbon filter. I spray occasionele. I know there are lots of regulations. Infra red is indeed only workable if there are objects in the room. But the good thing is no air movement. Dat makes a big difference. So, you agree that a high exaust is a good option and opposite a low or high intake ?
@@D3Sshooter no problem at all. well i guess if you dont live near anybody you dont really need the active carbon filter but it does take a lot of the harmful bits out of the air and of course the smell itself. As for heat im not sure if you already have the infra red heaters or not but if you dont a then you could always use a diesel heater or something outside the booth but directed towards the inlet filters so the air is still filtered before going into the booth or just use a hardener additive to increase drying times along with the warm water method. a booth is heated to the set temperature before painting (around 20 degree c) then the painting is done and then the heating is turned back on inside the booth to bake the paint dry. yes a low intake and high exhaust seems to be the best method as overspray tends to rise up and then fall back down, so you want to try and get as much of it out the booth before it falls back down into your wet paint on the panels. you will find once you have the paint all the information is on the tin as to temperatures, viscosity and mix ratios etc.
Just wondering what your native language is? Your English is excellent, better than most native English speakers :-) But your choice of words gives it away, you use technically correct phrases and words where a natural English speaker would get lazy and use short cuts. Your videos are very well made and your speech is really very relaxing and easy to listen to. Regards, Ray
That's the first time i have seen ratchet straps used in framing like that. Make sure you have good filtration on the incoming air. Seems most booth designs have filters on the air going out. Well who cares about the air going out being filtered that doesn't keep dirt out of your paint.
TXS for the comments, well I have always been a bit odd in doing things.. I just do what I found out to be easy over time.... might not always be right :) ... I will have filters in and out.... the out filter is more environmental and protection for the fan
I found this series as I am about to start building my booth. It has helped me a lot. Thank you for sharing. Subbed
"It's all very easy to do, nothing really special. Just a little bit of wood work, and for a guy who is a little bit handy like you, that should be no problem."
Dang man teaching us and making us feel good about ourselves? You fuckin' lad!
thanks for the comments, indeed very simple
Nice project! Everyone needs a paint booth.
TXS for the comments
You make it look simple. Look forward to the finished paint booth.
TXS for the comments, it is simple
Another great video. Good to see the spray booth build has started 👍
TXS for the comments
A truly thorough job, as always. Well done and can’t wait to see the finished job. I so envy how much space you have.
TXS for the comments
I absolutely love this thank you 🙏🏻 for this video
Glad you enjoyed it!
Hey Steve.
Thanks for another great video. I have enjoyed many of your videos about your Massey, Old Rusty, and other DIY projects - but well, who dosent like seeing other people work - 😂. You always make it look so easy and that inspires me. And a very nice place you have to. Looking forward to see more videos from you, so keep up the good work. 🙂
Best regards
Jimmi, Denmark
Thanks Jimmy, for the nice comments. More is to come
Looking good so far !
TXS for the comments
Great video. Finnish wood from Luvia , about 30km from my place :)
Thanks for the comments
With the right tools it's looks easy (i doin't have), but it looks to be be a nice paint booth when it's ready, greatings your neighbor :-)
TXS for the comments, tools are just an aid and make the work progress faster... a hammer will do the same job just a bit slower
Another great video from you sir👍
TXS for the comments
Thanks for sharing 👍
TXS for the comments
Zoals Akieba zei is overdruk beter om het stof buiten te houden, voor de verwarming, misschien met warme lucht? En de verf vooraf op dezelfde temperatuur natuurlijk 😊👍goed bezig
marc vs inderdaad overdruk is beter. Verwarming die ik met infra rood panelen van 120 op 60 cm. Dat werkt perfect. Geen gesleur met branders etc.
I hope you are building a positive pressure booth, its much easier to keep one of those dust free!
TXS for the comments, you are right, at this point I am having only one fan on the exhaust, so that will create a vacuum/ under-pressure which is more dust prone unless all is very well sealed. I might add an intake fan and regulate the speed between the two so I can create a over pressure...
you could have saved some money on the walls by using polysheet instead of the osb boards. also you want to pull fresh air from the front say and exhaust from the rear, also you want to exhaust from high up to remove the overspray from the air before it falls into the wet paint. using a active carbon filter on the exhaust is also a must with a pre filter of course. i guess from the sounds of it your going to be using 2k paints which with a fast hardener and rocket will air dry so no need to use heat, infra heaters only heat surfaces and not the air i believe so they will need to close to panels in order to heat them. there are a few ways of getting around not having heat in a booth like pre heating panels before you paint them (ive painted vans in a booth with no heat and just placed a diesel heater inside the van for a while before painting in order to heat the panels up) but your best option is to place the paint in some warm water before using it (this thins the paint down without the need for thinners making it flow out better) and the use of U-POL rocket or other brand paint accelerator will help the paint dry faster, im planning on building a booth for painting a project of mine and im gonna go without heat. keeping the floor surfaces wet will also help to keep the dust down. as for lighting you want as many lights as you can get hold of in there, put them on the ceiling and around the outside walls to keep shadows to a minimum. im not sure if you use social media or anything like that but im always happy to have a chat and share the knowledge i have on the subject of painting
Ross l , realy helpfull tips. Txs so much. In terms of filters, that is indeed what i plan. Except the carbon filter. I spray occasionele. I know there are lots of regulations. Infra red is indeed only workable if there are objects in the room. But the good thing is no air movement. Dat makes a big difference. So, you agree that a high exaust is a good option and opposite a low or high intake ?
Ross l txs once more. I will paint those OSB boards
@@D3Sshooter no problem at all. well i guess if you dont live near anybody you dont really need the active carbon filter but it does take a lot of the harmful bits out of the air and of course the smell itself. As for heat im not sure if you already have the infra red heaters or not but if you dont a then you could always use a diesel heater or something outside the booth but directed towards the inlet filters so the air is still filtered before going into the booth or just use a hardener additive to increase drying times along with the warm water method. a booth is heated to the set temperature before painting (around 20 degree c) then the painting is done and then the heating is turned back on inside the booth to bake the paint dry. yes a low intake and high exhaust seems to be the best method as overspray tends to rise up and then fall back down, so you want to try and get as much of it out the booth before it falls back down into your wet paint on the panels. you will find once you have the paint all the information is on the tin as to temperatures, viscosity and mix ratios etc.
@@D3Sshooter yes painting them white will help with making it feel brighter inside
TXS for the comments
Just wondering what your native language is? Your English is excellent, better than most native English speakers :-) But your choice of words gives it away, you use technically correct phrases and words where a natural English speaker would get lazy and use short cuts. Your videos are very well made and your speech is really very relaxing and easy to listen to.
Regards, Ray
Ray G , txs Ray. My native language is flemish. But went to college in Virginia many moons ago.
Could you provide the supplier, manufacturer, model/part number of the turbine ventilator fans? Cost?
I did buy those at ventilator land, here is the link www.ventilatieland.nl/ventilator they have all kinds of them.
Nice job 👍🏾
TXS for the comments
That's the first time i have seen ratchet straps used in framing like that. Make sure you have good filtration on the incoming air. Seems most booth designs have filters on the air going out. Well who cares about the air going out being filtered that doesn't keep dirt out of your paint.
TXS for the comments, well I have always been a bit odd in doing things.. I just do what I found out to be easy over time.... might not always be right :) ... I will have filters in and out.... the out filter is more environmental and protection for the fan
Nice video thanks. Just FYI you're saying 76.5 cm but writing 67.5 on the board around 3.5 minutes in.
TXS for the comments, my typical issue dyslexic .. ever since I was born...sorry