I had made a version of this many years ago when I was restoring an old car and it was really very helpful. Blasting media isn't all that expensive, but if you only get to use it once the cost adds up quickly. Good metal cabinet type blasting booths can be rather pricey and they take up too much space for many garages. They also tend to leak blasting media all over the place as well. No thanks. But since they're so handy for removing old finish and corrosion from parts in need of restoration, if you do that sort of thing often they really are a valuable tool to have around.
Anyways, since I really need to get moving on my moms DG906, and some of the parts need refinishing, I redesigned the old collapsible booth to make it stronger, and scaled it down a bit as well. With the exception of the canvas liner, this particular booth is made of material readily available at lumber yards and hardware stores all over the place, and after a small amount of disassembly the two sides fold down onto the back. The entire affair can then be leaned up against a wall somewhere out of the way.
In the following drawings, while the dimensions are correct on all of them, only the exploded view isometric drawings accurately reflect the joint construction used. With the exception of two boards left out for clarity, the last drawing shows what the finished structure will look like. The two missing boards will be very obvious in the construction photos that follow.
I'm posting this here so that if any of you think a thing like this might be useful, you can go ahead and make your own using this as a guide of sorts.
[this post was last edited: 8/29/2014-03:00]





Anyways, since I really need to get moving on my moms DG906, and some of the parts need refinishing, I redesigned the old collapsible booth to make it stronger, and scaled it down a bit as well. With the exception of the canvas liner, this particular booth is made of material readily available at lumber yards and hardware stores all over the place, and after a small amount of disassembly the two sides fold down onto the back. The entire affair can then be leaned up against a wall somewhere out of the way.
In the following drawings, while the dimensions are correct on all of them, only the exploded view isometric drawings accurately reflect the joint construction used. With the exception of two boards left out for clarity, the last drawing shows what the finished structure will look like. The two missing boards will be very obvious in the construction photos that follow.
I'm posting this here so that if any of you think a thing like this might be useful, you can go ahead and make your own using this as a guide of sorts.
[this post was last edited: 8/29/2014-03:00]




