Paint Booth Filter & PM Scheduler
A free paint booth maintenance register: last service, interval, due date and overdue alerts — sorted by urgency, stored in your browser.
Your register stays in this browser (localStorage) — nothing is uploaded.
Add your first paint booth to see the schedule. Sorted by urgency, the next due item is always on top.
Field notes from maintenance practice
Booth filters are a fire and finish issue at once: loaded exhaust filters drop face velocity below the design (compromising overspray capture and, for compliance, the rated capture efficiency), and dried overspray is fuel — which is why NFPA 33 treats filter condition and residue housekeeping as inspection items, not suggestions. Finish quality gives the early warning: dirt-in-paint complaints typically spike a week before anyone checks the manometer.
Date-mark filters on installation with a paint pen — 'how old is this filter?' should never require archaeology. Run the register on whatever device lives where the work happens — a workshop tablet beats a spreadsheet on someone's laptop, because the person doing the job sees the list.
Sources & references
- NFPA 33 — spray application using flammable materials
- Booth OEM manuals — filter schedules and face velocity
Scheduling aid only — statutory inspection intervals, OEM schedules and your insurer's requirements govern where they differ.
Paint Booth Filter & PM Scheduler for maintenance and reliability teams: A free paint booth maintenance register: last service, interval, due date and overdue alerts — sorted by urgency, stored in your browser. Free, private (everything runs in your browser) and ready for daily plant use.
About Paint Booth Filter & PM Scheduler
This scheduler keeps a living register of your paint booths: add each one with its last service date and interval, and the board computes due dates, sorts by urgency and flags anything overdue or due within 14 days. One tap (✓) marks a service done and restarts that asset's clock. Booth exhaust filters change on manometer reading or monthly in steady use (weekly in production shops); intake filters typically run 3–6× the exhaust life; quarterly covers fans, belts and lighting seals.
How to use Paint Booth Filter & PM Scheduler
- 1Add each asset with its last service date and interval — presets reflect the cited standard, and you can override per asset.
- 2The register sorts itself by urgency: overdue first, then due-soon (≤14 days), with a badge per asset.
- 3Tick ✓ when a service is done to reset that asset's clock to today — the whole register persists in your browser.
Why use Paint Booth Filter & PM Scheduler?
- ✓A free paint booth maintenance register: last service, interval, due date and overdue alerts — sorted by urgency, stored in your browser — computed instantly with the standard formula
- ✓100% free and unlimited, with no sign-up, login or paywall
- ✓Runs entirely in your browser — readings and asset data never leave your device
- ✓Niche-specific defaults and thresholds for paint booth, traceable to the cited standards
Frequently asked questions
How often should a paint booth be serviced or inspected?+
Booth exhaust filters change on manometer reading or monthly in steady use (weekly in production shops); intake filters typically run 3–6× the exhaust life; quarterly covers fans, belts and lighting seals. Severe duty, harsh environments or regulatory requirements shorten it — and your OEM manual, insurer or local code always takes precedence over the generic default.
What face velocity should my booth hold and how do I check it?+
Most spray booths are designed around 100 fpm (0.5 m/s) average face velocity for crossdraft/downdraft designs — your booth plate or permit states the figure. Check with an anemometer at a grid of points across the opening (or filter face) quarterly and after filter changes: low velocity means loaded filters, slipping belts or blocked exhaust; high velocity wastes heated air and disturbs spray patterns. Log the reading in the asset name line each quarter.
How strict should I be about hitting the due date exactly?+
Treat the due date as the end of a window, not a cliff: industry practice allows roughly ±10% of the interval for planning convenience. What kills paint booths is systematic slippage — each service a few weeks late quietly stretches the real interval far beyond the standard one. The overdue badge exists to make that visible.
How do I handle assets that fail between services?+
Repair work doesn't replace the scheduled service unless it covered the same scope — a breakdown fix usually addresses one fault, while the PM covers the checklist. After a major repair that does cover the scope, tick the paint booth as serviced; after a spot fix, leave the schedule untouched.
Embed Paint Booth Filter & PM Scheduler on your website
Want Paint Booth Filter & PM Scheduleron your own site? Paste this snippet into any HTML page — it's free, with no API key or sign-up. The tool loads in an iframe and keeps working exactly as it does here.
<iframe src="https://tooljolt.com/tools/paint-booth-filter-scheduler" width="100%" height="640" style="border:1px solid #e5e7eb;border-radius:12px;max-width:680px" title="Paint Booth Filter & PM Scheduler — ToolJolt" loading="lazy"></iframe>Related Industrial tools
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