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#1
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Well I thought I would share the paint booth that I made in in my back yard this weekend for those who do their own paint work. I started out with a roll of plastic that I had laying around and covered a section of ground where I wanted to set up the booth. Just a standard 4 mil clear plastic. I used bricks that were left over from my dads house to hold down the edges. I bought a party tent offline on ebay for $500 that came with the full metal pipe frame and all canvas for setup. The tent was a 32'x16'which is a little large but I wanted to be able to paint my 25'seafari and the race hull in one day. They sell smaller ones for less that would do well for 20 hulls that would be easier to manage but even as large as this one was we set it up with 2 people and a kid. We put the frame together and then mounted the canvas on it before we stood it up and placed the legs on to make it more manageable. After we got it up we placed the sides on which had nice clear windows in it to provide light to paint by so I didn't have to mess with hooking up explosion proof lights inside of the booth. It was plenty bright to see to paint with just the sunlight that passed threw the canvas and windows. Once the tent was all the way up and tied off to stakes to the ground we took 5 strips of 3' wide conveyor belt from my work and laid them on top of the plastic on the floor so that the plastic would not move around as much while painting. We bought 4 $10 box fans form lowes to install in the back of the tent for ventilation. They were put together in a frame and then put on a rack so that they would mount up high in the back wall. We cut the canvas open and installed the fans in the wall and sealed the unit off with tape. They provide plenty of air to keep positive pressure in the tent so no grit and trash gets in. The fans are 3 speed and on high they swell the tent sides out well. It took over half the day to build it and set it up but like many other things it take longer the first time around. I believe it could be set up in 4 hours now that we have done it once. It seemed to work very well and was all done for around $700 bucks total. I purchased a supplied air respirator to use while painting it the booth that has an air pump and a supplied air hood. The air ducts in a 3/4" air line that has a home make air cooler in line of the supply line. We took a tub and a coil of copper tubing that was coiled up about 6 circular rotations and installed fittings on both ends and put it inline on the hood supply line inside of the tub. Filled the tub with ice and water so that the ambient temp air would pass threw the chest and cool the supply air down. Painting in a enclosed booth with a tyvex suit on will get hot quick but with the chilled air going in the hood and down threw the suit it was not bad at all. Here is some pics of the booth set up, I will try to get some pics of the air chiller unit. After painting in the open air several times, it is nice to be able to control the dust and bugs that seem to like flying into the fresh sprayed paint. Any of you guys that are considering painting you hulls, this is a cheep and easy way to do it.
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Current SeaCraft projects: 68 27' SeaCraft Race boat 71 20' SeaCraft CC sf 73 23' SeaCraft CC sf 74 20' SeaCraft Sceptre 74 20' SeaCraft CC sf |
#2
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Where are the canapés?
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#3
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Aint no canapés at this party, just some deadly voc's. They take you mind places!
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Current SeaCraft projects: 68 27' SeaCraft Race boat 71 20' SeaCraft CC sf 73 23' SeaCraft CC sf 74 20' SeaCraft Sceptre 74 20' SeaCraft CC sf |
#4
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Some pictures of the car once sprayed, it is Hot Rods Hugger Orange. It is an two part urethane that has flatting agent mixed in to give it that old school matted look. Didn't want a gloss job this time, trying something new, think I like it. I defiantly dose not show the minor imperfections as bad. Also some pics of the suit I sprayed it in to keep the voc's out of my head. It was hot but manageable with the cool air supplied flowing threw the ice chest coling device I made for the supply line.
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Current SeaCraft projects: 68 27' SeaCraft Race boat 71 20' SeaCraft CC sf 73 23' SeaCraft CC sf 74 20' SeaCraft Sceptre 74 20' SeaCraft CC sf |
#5
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That should have worked well - those box fans move a LOT of air!
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'72 SeaFari/150E-Tec/Hermco Bracket, owned since 1975. http://i188.photobucket.com/albums/z...Part2019-1.jpg |
#6
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Hey Hey Hey, love to play tackle. That Camary ain`t nevah gonna be a sleapah. Love the huggah. |
#7
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Well, tent is down and the car is back in its home ready for re-assembly. The job turned out nice for some one with limited painting experience. Took 2 hours to take the tent down and box it up. Few pics of the air pump and the ice box that cooled the supply air to the hood and suit. I don't think I would of been able to stand the heat with out the tub full of ice cooling it down. Used a 75 quart cooler of Ice in the tub (all melted in the pics) and the copper tub transfers the heat fairly well. May take a clean smaller radiator and adapt fittings on it and dunk it under the ice water next time or add some more tub to the line now to get a little better transfer. All in all Im happy with the job, with all paint, sand paper, tent, and air supply pump kit and fans it was still under $1500 to do every thing form primer to finish. The cheapest local shop wanted $5000. So I saved $3500 and it feels good to do something yourself especially when you cant afford to pay someone else. The hot rods flatzs hugger orange matted color looks good, defiantly different than a high gloss job but im really liking it. Now just to place the pieces back on, get the new wheels & tires mounted and then she will be ready to hurt some fellings.
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Current SeaCraft projects: 68 27' SeaCraft Race boat 71 20' SeaCraft CC sf 73 23' SeaCraft CC sf 74 20' SeaCraft Sceptre 74 20' SeaCraft CC sf |
#8
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Good Job!
In FLA. this would not last through 1 summer storm LOL.
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[SIGPIC][/SIGPIC] "If You Done It...It Ain't Braggin" my rebuild thread: http://www.classicseacraft.com/commu...ad.php?t=18594 |
#9
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Very nice!
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1977 SeaCraft 23' Sceptre W/ Alum Tower & Yamaha 225 www.LouveredProductsUnlimited.com |
#10
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That's an impressive paint booth Friz! Good ideas on the windows and supply air cooler! A friend of mine that's a professional auto restoration guy built a paint booth in one of the 5 bays in a metal building behind his house, and he had to line the walls with florescent lights to get it bright enough to do good paint work!
Do you have any problems with the fans blowing in bugs or dust? I think my friend, who is a serious perfectionist, set up the fans to pull air out, and used a bunch of furnace filters for the air intake, but I believe he still wets down the filters and floor before painting to minimize dust problems.
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'72 SeaFari/150E-Tec/Hermco Bracket, owned since 1975. http://i188.photobucket.com/albums/z...Part2019-1.jpg |
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