Showing posts with label painting booth. Show all posts
Showing posts with label painting booth. Show all posts

Thursday, April 4, 2019

DIY Camera Rig


My positive pressure indoor spray painting booth worked great, but it was so large, that it was impractical. Once I took it down and re-arranged the Rocket Room, I was pretty sure I'd never use it again, at least not in its original design.

Besides, I'm getting into airbrushing, which I'm hoping might take up less space than I'd need for indoor rattle can painting.

But I did need a rig for shooting downward-facing video. I have a lot of projects I'd like to add to my YouTube channel, but didn't have a decent setup to actually shoot. So I cannibalized the PVC from the paint booth to build a small, table-top camera rig which should enable me to easily shoot builds and unboxing videos.


This video isn't a how-to-build instructional. There are tons of those on YouTube. If you're interested in building one, watch a few videos and you'll get the idea of how simple it is to build one for a small camera.

My camera is held on with a 1/4-20 bolt which goes through a hole in one of the lengths of PVC. The 1/4-20 bolt (1/4 inch in diameter, 20 threads per inch) fits standard consumer camera tripod mounts.

I'm hoping to upload a lot more stuff soon. I've got some ideas I'd like to shoot!


Follow me on Twitter.

Like my Facebook page for blog updates and extra stuff.

Have a question you'd like to see addressed on this blog? Email me at iamtherocketn00b@gmail.com. 

Wednesday, July 26, 2017

Indoor Spray Paint Booth - Success!

I've been too busy lately to write much on this blog, but I have completed the positive pressure spray paint booth video series. Here's the final video.


I've gotten good results finishing several rockets with this booth, all of which I spray painted inside my apartment! A full post on the booth will be written soon.

For the moment, though, I have a lot of stuff to prep for this weekend's launch.

Follow me on Twitter.

Like my Facebook page for blog updates and extra stuff.

Have a question you'd like to see addressed on this blog? Email me at iamtherocketn00b@gmail.com.

Saturday, July 1, 2017

Testing the Indoor Spray Painting Booth


Once I got my indoor, positive-pressure spray paint booth built, it was time to test it out. I started with the white undercoat on the Quest Superbird.

The Superbird is built, and looks great. I am behind on the editing and posting of the video build series of that rocket, but you can see the first several videos here.

After the first test spray, I realized the booth would need a bit of tweaking before I used it again. Here's the video of the first test.


I don't want to give any spoilers, but I will say the kinks did get worked out, as you'll see in the next two videos. The Superbird turned out surprisingly well, considering the trouble I had while building it.


And I've moved on to finish the paint job on the Sky Wolf. Once the decals and rail buttons are on, that rocket will also be ready to go!


Having this booth set up has certainly made it easier for me to get a nice paint job on my rockets, and more convenient for me to paint when I want to. More details - and video - to follow soon!

Follow me on Twitter.

Like my Facebook page for blog updates and extra stuff.

Have a question you'd like to see addressed on this blog? Email me at iamtherocketn00b@gmail.com.

Monday, June 26, 2017

Indoor Spray Painting Booth - Sneak Peek


After toying with the idea for a long time, I have built an indoor spray painting booth, so that I can have a place to paint rockets when I want to. The area outside the house in which my apartment is located has little space for spray painting, and the North Atlantic coast tends to be too windy on most days. Good spray painting weather is hard to come by here.

And then there are the stray insects that love to land in fresh wet paint...

I built an indoor booth last year, and while I did get some beautiful paint jobs with it, the design I came up with was potentially dangerous, so I never posted it here.

Finally, I have finished an indoor booth with which I can safely paint inside my apartment. And it's large enough for most projects.

A full build and post will be forthcoming. For now, though, here's Part 1 of the four-part video series I have shot on the booth.

Indoor Spray Painting - Positive Pressure Booth, Part 1


Follow me on Twitter.

Like my Facebook page for blog updates and extra stuff.

Have a question you'd like to see addressed on this blog? Email me at iamtherocketn00b@gmail.com.

Saturday, March 19, 2016

Astron Sprint XL (Clone) - Finished!

I'm taking a break from my series on repairs, simulations, etc. - all the good stuff I got from the failed flight of the Quest Magnum Sport Loader - to show off my new rocket.

After months of working in tiny increments on a bunch of rockets, I finally finished one - the Estes Astron Sprint XL.


This BT-60 (1.374 inch diameter) rocket features a long elliptical nose cone, a tail cone or boat tail, which helps to reduce aerodynamic base drag, and elliptical fins - which are said to reduce induced drag - more on this another time.

Part of what held me back for so long was being unable to paint. Finally, I built a small spray painting booth, in about an hour, for next to nothing, from a cardboard box. It works really well, and I'll write up the build soon.


This is actually a clone of the Estes kit. I had started the kit itself about a week before I started this one. But since this was my first time building a rocket with elliptical fins, rather than straight-edged fins, and since I like to sand most of my fins into airfoil shapes, I decided I needed a practice run before I built the kit.

I simply used the balsa sheet from which the kit fins came to trace some "practice fins" onto some scrap balsa.


This has convinced me that it's a good idea to save the balsa sheet from some of your kits - if you need to make a new fin, you have a template already made. This is especially helpful if you have a rocket with unusually-shaped fins.

Turned out that sanding an airfoil into an elliptical fin requires a little practice, but isn't that hard once you've had a couple tries at it.

The leading edges of the fins are rounded, and the trailing edges tapered. When I build the
kit, I will probably have the sharp, tapered edge extend all the way to the tips of the fins.
Since I'd made a few good fins, I decided not to waste them. Why not build the whole rocket and try to make it as nice as possible? Flying on an E9-6 motor, the rocket may go very high - well over 1,000 feet. And considering the luck I've had with keeping my rockets on the field lately, I figured it might be nice to be able to lose one and still have another at home.

Luckily, the nose cone/tail cone combination is part of the new Estes BT-60 nose cone pack you can buy. I accidentally bought six packs of these - I was trying to buy a pack of nose cones which recently went out of production, and most vendors I ordered from simply hadn't updated the photos on their websites. Rather than raise a fuss or have to mail anything back, I just kept the nose cones I received, knowing I'd use them eventually.

Since this was a clone of a kit I was already building, I tested out a few techniques. Rather than filling the wood grain on the fins with carpenter's wood filler (CWF), as I often do, I tried an old-fashioned model rocketry solution: sanding sealer.

I get a little frustrated with CWF sometimes. I often get warped fins or pock marks from air bubbles in the filler, which I only notice after I've painted the rocket.

The sanding sealer was pretty good, and there is barely any wood grain showing on the final rocket.

The tail cone is plastic, and as such, there is a seam where it joins the body tube.


I sanded the overlap of the plastic until it was an exact match for the airframe tube. But once I applied primer to the rocket, I could still see the joint. I thought about how I might conceal that joint, and decided to try medium thick CA (cyanoacrylate - a super glue which comes in different viscocities for modelers). I ran a bead along the seam and wiped off the excess with a paper towel. Then I sanded it as smooth as I could. It was hard to tell if it had worked after sanding it. But once I did a second coat of primer, it was clear it had worked really well. Primer helps you see the imperfections before you paint.

You can't see the joint.


I was really pleased it worked.

The Astron Sprint XL is such an attractive rocket! I spent a lot of time on it, and managed to get it very smooth, going so far as to sand off tiny imperfections in the paint, then polish and wax the rocket before adding decals.

The decals actually came from a damaged kit. I ordered the Astron Sprint XL a while back, and when I opened it, the kit was half smashed. The vendor kindly replaced it for me, and I sent the damaged kit back for return to Estes - but I must have forgotten to put the decals back in the package, since I found them in the Rocket Room recently. I decided to put them to good use.

It's good to have finally finished a project. I'll soon have finished the Estes Goblin as well. Then, it'll be time to prime and paint my larger Estes Pro Series II rockets - in time to make an attempt at a Level 1 high power rocketry certification flight attempt.

For that, I'll have to build a bigger booth.

Like my Facebook page for blog updates.

Follow me on Twitter.