ToolJoltTools

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.

Add Paint booth

Your register stays in this browser (localStorage) — nothing is uploaded.

0
Assets
0
Due ≤ 14 days
0
Overdue

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

  1. 1Add each asset with its last service date and interval — presets reflect the cited standard, and you can override per asset.
  2. 2The register sorts itself by urgency: overdue first, then due-soon (≤14 days), with a badge per asset.
  3. 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.

Embed code
<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>

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