Very nice simple booth. You are the first person I have found to address the fan issue. There was are some nice builds out there but like you said there is a slight chance if you were to use enamels or lacquer. Thanks again for showing your work.
Made a large 24x24 paint booth being I do some models up to 1/16 scale. I cut up old cardboard boxes I saved (FREE), hot glue gun (IN MY STOCK), tape (IN MY STOCK), 24x24 A/C filters (4 PACK $24), one 24x24 3 speed box fan ($20 New) set it up and tested found that even with the box fan on low all the paint was pulled to the filter. Works great and so happy I did not buy the ready-made booths $$$. Thanks for the info, Mike
Great video. Not sure why all the hate about the 3D printer. That is clearly an optional component that you were just having fun with. Thanks for posting this.
Thank you. I borrowed 2 large street signage from a street lamp, pretty much followed your build. For extraction I incorporated 2 x 120mm PC fans. I printed front grills and back attached 90 degree air vents on the back eliminating the tube and fan. I also added in a light mounted to the top, all connected to an adapter in order to utilize an old router cable.
Seen plenty of diy spray booths with wood and cardboard but I really like the idea of using corrugated plastic.. cheap, light, relatively sturdy, easy to cut. I built mine using this as a guide but with a few differences. 1. I used L brackets instead of tape, not as cheap/simple but I liked the look. 2. Used bathroom fan placed in center, I think these are at least decently safe? 3. Cut broken broom handle to make stand offs for the sheet and magnets that retains the filter, I find it funny that some people here seem to think a 3D printer is a requirement. 3. On the sheet that retains the filter Instead of cutting one opening over where the fan is, I cut two large rectangular openings on each side. Thought it might even the air flow a little and force the air to travel through more of the filter instead of just going straight in making it last longer and maybe a little better? Not sure but just an idea I had, been working just fine. Thanks for the video.
Nice job! I like your design. I’ll probably just use corrugated cardboard instead. Not as sturdy as yours, but I can always make a new box. Thanks for the vid.
I use a 12 volt inline fan designed to ventilate a boat engine compartment so the electric motor is already sealed. I connected it to a cheap speed controller. With full power the fan can move 320 cfm. I usually have it on half, I have sprayed water directly across the opening of the booth and it gets sucked straight in.
Suggestion, just use a furnace filter at the back of the box and if need be cut a foam cutout to place in front of it. Doing this would allow the filter to be switched around when covered with paint. This would give a two for one and extend the use of each filter.
Sounds much better than having to buy a $400.00+ 3D printer for a "cheap" airbrush booth and I bet it runs much more effectively - (except for the noise from the vacuum cleaner) good for you!!
Jesus...People in the comments complaining you used a 3D printer when they don’t have one...not realizing they don’t need one and can use...I don’t know ANYTHING ELSE removable. Like adhesive Velcro?!? Or just use tape. Like most of them even tried to make one of these or complain about a 3D printer when they don’t even have an airbrush!!!
The point is this is supposed to be a “simple, dirt-cheap” spray booth, but he then proceeds to use high-end software that requires a lot of experience, and an expensive 3D printer for a complex magnet retention design he admits later is unnecessary. The disconnect between the content and purported intended audience is humorous. People aren’t angry, they’re laughing at the juxtaposition of “simple, dirt-cheap” to everything else and being sarcastic. Nobody is trying to be mean or hurt anybody’s feelings. It’s a fine video and provides some good ideas, but it is funny.
Glad to see you thinking about combustion risks with solvent paints.... many wouldn't. But the fan design may be problematic - fan suction falls off at the fourth power relative to distance from the center of the inlet....so with a 4-6" inlet orifice with flat sides (not a bell or circular bevel inlet shroud) that drops off to almost zero inside the box. The dryer hose is tough for maintaining suction due to level of static resistance within the duct. The axial fan you have may work fine, but there are ways to make this better that aren't super costly.
I WAS WONDERING WHAT YOUR FIX TO THIS MIGHT BE (SORRY ABOUT THE CAPS, I WORK FFROM HOME AND WORK REQUIRES ALL CAPS) HAVE YOU DESIGNED YOUR OWN SPRAY BOOTH?
I too build a paint booth but I used a TV case pulled all the guts out .leveled it up with some 1/4 in birch panels and I use paint mask filters and brushless CPU fans 2 to suck air in and 2 to suck air out I also made a turn table with a small d/c motor and a record player turntable it all work on 1 9v to operate the fans and 2 AA. Batteries to operate the turntable.also cut a hole on one side for light and gave it magnet clips to hold small pieces I'm in the process of installing l.e.d.lights as it's to dark when the sun goes down
Suggestion, consider using wall corner angles for all the corners for when a sturdier connection is needed. This would accommodate when needing a much larger paint booth using foam boards would still be an option. Another possibility is to start with a large box. Adding the foam board would allow to start with a white interior if needed.
This is some sexy music playing, made my want to take my new painting booth out to dinner.....things got weird... I went out and bought one after that... good video....I guess.
Just a heads up, a 6in inline is massive overkill for this size of spraybooth. Do your Cubic foot measurements, then get a fan of appropriate CFM (cubic feet of air per minute). This will save you tons of money, time and hair pulling. Computer fans may be a great option but I've never tried it first hand. :D great vid tho!
GREAT VIDEO!! Yes, please before you start using solvent based paints get the squirrel cage blower with the external motor mounted up. So much safer for facial hair, keeps family members docile....
I'm just trying to get into hobby so I have a question: what are the requirements for a spray booth and is there any reason to build one (besides ventilating fumes out from the model)? I thought I just use an old PC case with a couple of good coolers
Back in the late 60's or early 70's I recived a model car and I wanted it to look better then the other model cars I had build, I was around oh well not sure how old I was but I was a young kid at the time. it was when spay paint first came out. any way to make a long story short. one day I found a Styrofoam cooler and I took a ice pick and punched holes in a circle at the back then placed it in my window, taking old carpet scraps, my father was a carpet layer so I had a lot of them to chouce from then I painted my model it came out great.
This is a good idea but how does the corrugated plastic structure stand up to Urethane or enamel paints? I know you wouldn't dare spray these type of paints in your home - even if you had superior ventilation to do so - that's aside the point.
😂😂😂 love the booth but I wish I'd have seen it before I got over spray all over my wife's kitchen 😂😂😂 she's gonna love you once I build one of these beauties 😊 thank you, your a lifesaver........ literally 👍
I can relate Tom Wright. Yesterday I ruined the white wooden frame around one my bedroom windows with black spray paint. I had opened one of the windows so I would not breathe in the vapor, and only cover the windowframe with a piece of cardboard that was just 2cm wider then the part that I wanted to paint. Parents weren't really happy with it. Since it had been redone barely three months ago. Guess I need a booth too. Wood would suffice too, allthough it has a lesser 'clean' white look to it. And painting the wood of the booth would be pretty useless. XD
A squirrel cage for an old GM car is dirt cheap. I have been looking for those sheets forever to fill in crate bottoms. Where did u get them? Great work as always. I'd say u are the best RC youtuber still working,
Great idea about using a GM squirrel cage motor. You can get the sheets for cheap in bulk from a sign company or ebay. You can also get them for free during/right after election season if you live in the US.
Make It RC - just an observation from a disinterested viewer. Your video title would be great and fitting, if you didn’t toss in the CAD rendering & 3D printed parts and actually used the items that could be substituted as you mentioned in your reply since the 3D printed parts aren’t a requirement. Using the easily substituted parts gives validity to the video. As you said, you had all these items already on hand I’m relatively certain that 98% of the viewers don’t keep on hand the majority of the items you had, with the exception of duct tape, I’m pretty sure duct tape most everyone has that. Other then that, it is a great video. I’m not hatin, I’m just saying.
I have heard it said, that to a hammer everything is a nail. It follows that the person holding the hammer looks for nails even if they aren't aware of it. If a person holding hammer sees a nail that can be struck it simple must happen. This pattern holds true with the printer as well. As soon as you have and can use the printer, everything is a job for the printer. The good news is the bar for printer ownership is coming down rapidly! It would be easy to skip that step, as he actually did in the end (I found that quite funny), or make a replacement from some scrap wood and magnets.
The dimensions of the sheets I used was 18x24in. I believe you can find corrugated plastic sheets in larger sizes than that if needed. Good luck with your build. 👍
That’s fine trailer park engineering right there. Chicken wire, duct tape, JB Weld, a 3D printer, and Fusion 360...all any country boy needs to make anything.
Not sure exactly what the specs are on that blower, It's just something I already had on hand. I know it's designed for venting shops/green houses and similar applications. Certainly has some power. I was using a .35 nozzle.
Nice build, especially if you already have all the parts around. Better than a bucket in the yard and nowhere near the cost of the off the shelf stuff, that's not a bad spot to fit into, when you can. If you don't mind some advice, try not to start so many sentences with "I..." It's an odd habit I had to break myself. Before I was told I was doing it, I never had a clue and now I can't stop seeing it. What I found is that this little trick made write just a little bit differently and I almost always ended up adding something of use to the writing in the end. Regardless, your video quality is great and you are clearly putting real effort into this thing. I think you have good things coming your way. Keep up the good work, I'm enjoying the show.
What, do you get a lot of overspray from your airbrush, where you need a booth? I use my airbrush spraying into a box big enough to hold my subject matter and have no problems with overspray. I've used my airbrush to custom paint lighting sconces and ventilation registers that were installed on my walls and ceiling, no muss no fuss. I've painted numerous models in the family room with no signs of overspray settling outside the paint box or landing on non-desired surfaces.
You need the booth to remove the toxic atomized paint from the air. Especially for lacquer and enamel paints. You can smell the poison in those things. I once got a wiff of the cleaner and got an instant headache.
I'd like to see someone make a portable booth out of a discarded PC tower, nice size housing, just build folding sides ,top & bottom ,( corrugated plastic or sign material) like the small mail order model, throw in a fan & filter :)
Very nice simple booth. You are the first person I have found to address the fan issue. There was are some nice builds out there but like you said there is a slight chance if you were to use enamels or lacquer. Thanks again for showing your work.
Made a large 24x24 paint booth being I do some models up to 1/16 scale. I cut up old cardboard boxes I saved (FREE), hot glue gun (IN MY STOCK), tape (IN MY STOCK), 24x24 A/C filters (4 PACK $24), one 24x24 3 speed box fan ($20 New) set it up and tested found that even with the box fan on low all the paint was pulled to the filter. Works great and so happy I did not buy the ready-made booths $$$. Thanks for the info, Mike
I'm trying to get different ideas for spray booths. So far yours is the easiest one I've seen so far.
Thank you and have a blessed holiday season!!
Great video. Not sure why all the hate about the 3D printer. That is clearly an optional component that you were just having fun with. Thanks for posting this.
Nice work. Can probably get some velcro in there somewhere, so can fold that big thing up and store it away, if someone do not use all the time.
Thank you. I borrowed 2 large street signage from a street lamp, pretty much followed your build. For extraction I incorporated 2 x 120mm PC fans. I printed front grills and back attached 90 degree air vents on the back eliminating the tube and fan. I also added in a light mounted to the top, all connected to an adapter in order to utilize an old router cable.
Lots of great ideas here, even if you don't have a 3D printer. But maybe it's time to get one? Thanks for this video!
Works for me, thanks for sharing. I finished my spray booth today but I have't added an inline fan. Working progress I guess.
Seen plenty of diy spray booths with wood and cardboard but I really like the idea of using corrugated plastic.. cheap, light, relatively sturdy, easy to cut. I built mine using this as a guide but with a few differences. 1. I used L brackets instead of tape, not as cheap/simple but I liked the look. 2. Used bathroom fan placed in center, I think these are at least decently safe? 3. Cut broken broom handle to make stand offs for the sheet and magnets that retains the filter, I find it funny that some people here seem to think a 3D printer is a requirement. 3. On the sheet that retains the filter Instead of cutting one opening over where the fan is, I cut two large rectangular openings on each side. Thought it might even the air flow a little and force the air to travel through more of the filter instead of just going straight in making it last longer and maybe a little better? Not sure but just an idea I had, been working just fine. Thanks for the video.
Nice job brother
I will be making one. Thank you for the easy video.
Very well put together video. The spray booth looks great too. Enjoyed your explanation of why you crafted certain features into your plan. Thanks!
That point where he goes from duct tape and shoe goo to fusion 360! Funny 😁
😂😂😂😂😂
Nice job! I like your design. I’ll probably just use corrugated cardboard instead. Not as sturdy as yours, but I can always make a new box. Thanks for the vid.
Cool video.
Nice design.
How come your plastic sheets don't have real estate ads on one side ?
I use a 12 volt inline fan designed to ventilate a boat engine compartment so the electric motor is already sealed. I connected it to a cheap speed controller. With full power the fan can move 320 cfm. I usually have it on half, I have sprayed water directly across the opening of the booth and it gets sucked straight in.
Wow.. that's an old school ruler! 1:42
Suggestion, just use a furnace filter at the back of the box and if need be cut a foam cutout to place in front of it. Doing this would allow the filter to be switched around when covered with paint. This would give a two for one and extend the use of each filter.
I made my spray booth out of a cardboard box the old air filter from my car and a vacum cleaner
That's what I'm was thinking I might spray some paint on the cardboard to give it some rigidity and help it last longer.
Sounds much better than having to buy a $400.00+ 3D printer for a "cheap" airbrush booth and I bet it runs much more effectively - (except for the noise from the vacuum cleaner) good for you!!
I am planning exactly same thing, and you make it sounds like MacGyver cool!
Jesus...People in the comments complaining you used a 3D printer when they don’t have one...not realizing they don’t need one and can use...I don’t know ANYTHING ELSE removable. Like adhesive Velcro?!? Or just use tape. Like most of them even tried to make one of these or complain about a 3D printer when they don’t even have an airbrush!!!
The point is this is supposed to be a “simple, dirt-cheap” spray booth, but he then proceeds to use high-end software that requires a lot of experience, and an expensive 3D printer for a complex magnet retention design he admits later is unnecessary. The disconnect between the content and purported intended audience is humorous. People aren’t angry, they’re laughing at the juxtaposition of “simple, dirt-cheap” to everything else and being sarcastic. Nobody is trying to be mean or hurt anybody’s feelings. It’s a fine video and provides some good ideas, but it is funny.
Glad to see you thinking about combustion risks with solvent paints.... many wouldn't. But the fan design may be problematic - fan suction falls off at the fourth power relative to distance from the center of the inlet....so with a 4-6" inlet orifice with flat sides (not a bell or circular bevel inlet shroud) that drops off to almost zero inside the box. The dryer hose is tough for maintaining suction due to level of static resistance within the duct. The axial fan you have may work fine, but there are ways to make this better that aren't super costly.
I WAS WONDERING WHAT YOUR FIX TO THIS MIGHT BE (SORRY ABOUT THE CAPS, I WORK FFROM HOME AND WORK REQUIRES ALL CAPS)
HAVE YOU DESIGNED YOUR OWN SPRAY BOOTH?
This is perfect. Nice job well done thanks for sharing.
I too build a paint booth but I used a TV case pulled all the guts out .leveled it up with some 1/4 in birch panels and I use paint mask filters and brushless CPU fans 2 to suck air in and 2 to suck air out I also made a turn table with a small d/c motor and a record player turntable it all work on 1 9v to operate the fans and 2 AA. Batteries to operate the turntable.also cut a hole on one side for light and gave it magnet clips to hold small pieces I'm in the process of installing l.e.d.lights as it's to dark when the sun goes down
Let me plug my 3 D printer in. Gimme a second
LMAO!
It's good that you provide a visual example of a fan appropriate for solvent-based paints.👍
Well Cheap..... parts around £25.00 in uk. 3D Printer around £300.00..............Spray booths on Ebay from £50.00......Job Done
can you recommend a fan for lacquer/enamel?
Suggestion, consider using wall corner angles for all the corners for when a sturdier connection is needed. This would accommodate when needing a much larger paint booth using foam boards would still be an option. Another possibility is to start with a large box. Adding the foam board would allow to start with a white interior if needed.
This is some sexy music playing, made my want to take my new painting booth out to dinner.....things got weird... I went out and bought one after that... good video....I guess.
Thank you! The music was an....interesting choice.
Great booth!!! Thank you for Posting!
Where is a good place to buy the corrugated plastic?
Just a heads up, a 6in inline is massive overkill for this size of spraybooth. Do your Cubic foot measurements, then get a fan of appropriate CFM (cubic feet of air per minute). This will save you tons of money, time and hair pulling. Computer fans may be a great option but I've never tried it first hand. :D great vid tho!
I should have read the comments first. Yeah, my 3D printer is on the fritz. Up until then it was interesting.
Use screws or duct tape lol
As a retired engineer nice design. Like to know where you got that in line fan? Thanks for sharing peace
GREAT VIDEO!!
Yes, please before you start using solvent based paints get the squirrel cage blower with the external motor mounted up.
So much safer for facial hair, keeps family members docile....
is there one you can recommend?
Morning vibes by lakey inspired in the background.. nice!
Great job! Been a decent tutorial for ages! The rc hobby needs more creative people like you who make epic builds
Definitely a good job a great project thank you for sharing it with us
How loud is that type of fan? Was looking at getting the same type of fan for a project
Where can I find the corrugated plastic? How big do the sheets come in? Does anybody know
Nice looking booth!!
This was just enough for me to do my own build. Thanks
Doesn't that kind of plastic board melt when in contact with solvents?
Is this going to be an addition to the scale garage? That would be dope! Mini paint booth.
I'm just trying to get into hobby so I have a question: what are the requirements for a spray booth and is there any reason to build one (besides ventilating fumes out from the model)? I thought I just use an old PC case with a couple of good coolers
Love your "gettin busy" music
Acrylic can also contain solvents, just saying.
WATERBASED....is way more specific.
QAD will build one myself.
Great video and saved it so I can review.
Back in the late 60's or early 70's I recived a model car and I wanted it to look better then the other model cars I had build, I was around oh well not sure how old I was but I was a young kid at the time. it was when spay paint first came out. any way to make a long story short. one day I found a Styrofoam
cooler and I took a ice pick and punched holes in a circle at the back then placed it in my window, taking old carpet scraps, my father was a carpet layer so I had a lot of them to chouce from then I painted my model it came out great.
Do you have to have a fan on a small spray booth? what happens if you don't ?
This is a good one. I'm planning something similar and got some ideas from this. Thanks. :)
White board at the dollar store or use a thick cardboard box (packing box works well) if you have central vac in the house your off to the races..
What is the type of blower where the motor is outside of the airflow called? No luck searching on Amazon or Home Depot.
This is a good idea but how does the corrugated plastic structure stand up to Urethane or enamel paints? I know you wouldn't dare spray these type of paints in your home - even if you had superior ventilation to do so - that's aside the point.
Which is the distance between the fan and the next pic sheet? thanks
so what if you need to replace the filter?
😂😂😂 love the booth but I wish I'd have seen it before I got over spray all over my wife's kitchen 😂😂😂 she's gonna love you once I build one of these beauties 😊 thank you, your a lifesaver........ literally 👍
Tom Wright .... your right i do love this man now! X
lol, I'm glad you found this helpful.
I can relate Tom Wright. Yesterday I ruined the white wooden frame around one my bedroom windows with black spray paint. I had opened one of the windows so I would not breathe in the vapor, and only cover the windowframe with a piece of cardboard that was just 2cm wider then the part that I wanted to paint. Parents weren't really happy with it. Since it had been redone barely three months ago. Guess I need a booth too. Wood would suffice too, allthough it has a lesser 'clean' white look to it. And painting the wood of the booth would be pretty useless. XD
Samurai Thomas the paint comes with use
It did, I didn't like the white anyway XD
Wow, you sure do things the hard way.
A squirrel cage for an old GM car is dirt cheap. I have been looking for those sheets forever to fill in crate bottoms. Where did u get them? Great work as always. I'd say u are the best RC youtuber still working,
Great idea about using a GM squirrel cage motor. You can get the sheets for cheap in bulk from a sign company or ebay. You can also get them for free during/right after election season if you live in the US.
Bloody awesome mate 👍🏻
I set one up here but the ink mist comes back. Any tips?
"quick, simple, and cheap"...……….then proceeds to make some parts that he designed on his program, on his 3D printer.
Not a requirement but a nice tool to have. You could do the same thing with a dowel, PVC/ABS pipe, etc. if you wanted the magnet mounts.
Make It RC - just an observation from a disinterested viewer. Your video title would be great and fitting, if you didn’t toss in the CAD rendering & 3D printed parts and actually used the items that could be substituted as you mentioned in your reply since the 3D printed parts aren’t a requirement. Using the easily substituted parts gives validity to the video. As you said, you had all these items already on hand I’m relatively certain that 98% of the viewers don’t keep on hand the majority of the items you had, with the exception of duct tape, I’m pretty sure duct tape most everyone has that. Other then that, it is a great video. I’m not hatin, I’m just saying.
You know how it is Guys when you have a toy you wanna play with it ,start with simple pieces , move up, leave him alone , personally I'm jealous .
I have heard it said, that to a hammer everything is a nail. It follows that the person holding the hammer looks for nails even if they aren't aware of it. If a person holding hammer sees a nail that can be struck it simple must happen. This pattern holds true with the printer as well. As soon as you have and can use the printer, everything is a job for the printer. The good news is the bar for printer ownership is coming down rapidly!
It would be easy to skip that step, as he actually did in the end (I found that quite funny), or make a replacement from some scrap wood and magnets.
an airbursh and pump cost me a hell of a lot more than my $200 printer. You guys act like they are soooo out of reach.
Thx!
Yup the jump from duck tape to 3D printing magnet holders was a bit over the top.
Incridible.
Nice idea. As I will be paining a 1/8 scale bodies now and then a little bigger wouldn't hurt Did you say what measurements you used were?
The dimensions of the sheets I used was 18x24in. I believe you can find corrugated plastic sheets in larger sizes than that if needed. Good luck with your build. 👍
Where do you get the 6 inch duct flange?
With you til fusion 360. I can barely turn on a computer
"I added more duct tape to improve the appearance..." 🤨
That’s fine trailer park engineering right there. Chicken wire, duct tape, JB Weld, a 3D printer, and Fusion 360...all any country boy needs to make anything.
Great job,turned out great
Nice Job,White duct tape would look nicer
Thought the same...
Nice little spray booth. Just A little suggestion I recommend picking up some cheap clamps and a metal square youll find you will use them alot
I've looked at a lot of these videos, and like your design best. Thanks!
I was wondering if you put velcro on the sides to make it collapsible....!
That's a great idea! I'm sure it could be done without too much trouble.
Don't have a dremmel or a 3-D printer, but probably a cutter knife and soda caps will do!
Dude your stuff always amazes me!
Could this same method be used to make a photography light box?
What’s the name of the fan at 8:53 ?
nice and easy. what performance does your blower have? and what nozzle do you use?
Not sure exactly what the specs are on that blower, It's just something I already had on hand. I know it's designed for venting shops/green houses and similar applications. Certainly has some power. I was using a .35 nozzle.
Nice build, especially if you already have all the parts around. Better than a bucket in the yard and nowhere near the cost of the off the shelf stuff, that's not a bad spot to fit into, when you can. If you don't mind some advice, try not to start so many sentences with "I..." It's an odd habit I had to break myself. Before I was told I was doing it, I never had a clue and now I can't stop seeing it. What I found is that this little trick made write just a little bit differently and I almost always ended up adding something of use to the writing in the end. Regardless, your video quality is great and you are clearly putting real effort into this thing. I think you have good things coming your way. Keep up the good work, I'm enjoying the show.
What, do you get a lot of overspray from your airbrush, where you need a booth? I use my airbrush spraying into a box big enough to hold my subject matter and have no problems with overspray. I've used my airbrush to custom paint lighting sconces and ventilation registers that
were installed on my walls and ceiling, no muss no fuss. I've painted numerous models in the family room with no signs of overspray settling outside the paint box or landing on non-desired surfaces.
You need the booth to remove the toxic atomized paint from the air. Especially for lacquer and enamel paints. You can smell the poison in those things. I once got a wiff of the cleaner and got an instant headache.
I was thinking you were going to sandwich the filter plastic cover with those magnetic mounts. Maybe that an option.
Would you mind if I inquire as to what drawing software your using. Thanks.
dryer vent duct? more like grow room vent duct haha :)
👌 Good things to have on hand
The mounts seem superfluous, but were very cool... I think the whole filter could just be press fit.
Excellent information Thanks
Geniale !!!...fatto molto bene!!!
Simple != Fusion360 + 3D printer.
Simple = cheap store bought screws/stand-offs.
I'd like to see someone make a portable booth out of a discarded PC tower, nice size housing, just build folding sides ,top & bottom ,( corrugated plastic or sign material) like the small mail order model, throw in a fan & filter :)
That's a neat idea. 👍
Yezzerr, put some nice cuts into that nice table.
Do you have the measurements on the booth ?
I also would like the STL files on your magnet catches
Great job on the booth, looks awesome 👍🏻👍🏻
When are you working on the pre-runner again?!
I’ll just keep painting under my carport since I’m only painting 1:64 scale. Good video tho and looks exactly like the ones on Amazon
would this work for spray cans as well
Hi It is really nice I also try to build one
Sorry to ask but is it possible the share 3D print file?
I have a 3D printer, have you shared the files?