Re: Spray Booth
I agree with sschefer.
What I did was use part of my garage for spraying a small car... I had to "hang" a sheet of plastic for a roof since I had trusses, then put up plastic walls using "T" shapes I made out of some tubing and wood.
If you've ever seen a commercial product called "zipwall" basically that's what I was going for. They're extensible poles that are designed to hold plastic sheets up as walls and form a dust barrier.
For filtering I used a hepa furnace filter and a couple of brushless fans to pull air out. Very important to use brushless fans or a non igniting fan of some kind, other than being poisonous the fumes are explosive in the right mix with air.
It worked ok... I still felt sick even wearing a respirator with carbon filters.
Next time I'll only spray in a booth with updraft ventilation sufficient to change out all the air a couple times a minute. You need to not only filter the air before it gets outside the booth, but you need to get fumes out of the air inside the booth so you don't breathe them too long, or let them build up to explosive levels.
If you're spraying because you think it'll give you a better finish than roll and tip, or be easier, I'd suggest you reconsider... modern marine paint is specifically designed to give a great roll and tip finish, and most of the work you'll do is in prep anyway, not in the actual painting.
Erik