On a factory visit in Hebei last winter, I watched a painter pause mid-shot, glance up, and nod at the ceiling media. “If that goes, my finish goes,” he said. That stuck with me. It’s why I pay close attention to spray booth ceiling filters—they’re the quiet heroes behind consistent finishes and low rework.
Regulations are nudging shops to higher capture efficiency and safer airflows. ISO 16890 has largely replaced EN 779 in many markets, and finishing lines—auto refinish, aerospace, furniture—expect stable pressure drop to keep airflow laminar. Honestly, that’s where good spray booth ceiling filters earn their keep.
| Spec | Spray Booth Ceiling Filter |
|---|---|
| Media | 100% polyester fibers, progressive-density, tackified face |
| Filtration class | F5/M5 (EN 779), ≈ ePM10 60–70% (ISO 16890 proxy; lab-to-lab may vary) |
| Basis weight | 550 g/m² or 600 g/m² |
| Max temperature | 120 ℃ |
| Initial ΔP @0.25 m/s | ≈ 25–45 Pa (clean media) |
| Recommended final ΔP | ≈ 200–250 Pa (shop practice) |
| Service life | ≈ 300–800 hours, duty dependent (solids load, change-out policy) |
Materials: thermally bonded polyester lofted into a depth-loading matrix; tackifier applied to the clean-air side; optional scrim backing to resist sagging. Methods: roll forming, in-line tackification, oven curing, and slit-to-width or pad cutting. Testing: legacy EN 779 (F5/M5) plus ISO 16890 classification when specified; gravimetric arrestance, dust-holding capacity, and pressure-drop curves. QA: ISO 9001 routines and lot traceability. To be honest, the scrim makes a difference when ceiling spans are wide.
- Auto refinish and OEM paint lines: laminar diffusion, dust control, better gloss holdout.
- Aerospace and rail: large cabins, steady airflow matters for orange peel control.
- Wood finishing: helps with nib reduction; many customers say cleaning intervals improved after switching.
Origin matters too: this media is produced at Second Buliding and Studying No21 shiji street, Handan, Hebei China—yes, I visited; surprisingly tidy line.
| Vendor | Class/Weight | Certs | Lead time | Customization |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| FiltersMaterial (Hebei) | F5/M5, 550–600 g/m² | ISO 9001; EN 779 data; ISO 16890 on request | ≈ 7–15 days | Rolls, pads, tackified/scrim, widths 0.6–2.1 m |
| EU Brand A | M5–ePM10 | ISO 16890; CE docs | ≈ 2–4 weeks | Cut-to-size pads; OEM kits |
| US Distributor B | MERV-ish M5 equivalents | Factory test sheets | Stock for common widths | Stock rolls only |
Go for tackified face down, scrim to the plenum. Pre-cut pads reduce lint, I guess obviously, but I still see shops trimming overhead—risky. Seal edges; leakage kills diffusion. Pair with prefilters to extend spray booth ceiling filters life by ≈ 20–40% in dusty environments.
- Auto refinish shop, Texas: switch to 600 g/m² with scrim cut booth cleaning by 30% and improved DOI; airflow stayed within ±8% until final ΔP.
- Furniture line, Poland: paired with G4 prefilter; change-out interval moved from 3 to 6 weeks (two shifts). They said dust nibs “dropped noticeably.”
Align with ISO 16890 for classification, observe NFPA 33 for spray application safety, and keep OSHA ventilation guidance in mind. For auto refinishing, EPA CFR rules still apply. Test data sheets should show arrestance, dust holding, and pressure drop curves—ask for them.
Activated carbon
By shape:Granular, Pellet, Powder,Honeycomb
By material:coconut, coal,lignite or wood
By applications: liquid and gas phase adsorptions
Raw Material: Various technical polypropylene and non-woven fiber
Process Technilogh:composite
Application:Pocket(bag) Filter
Range of efficiency:M5 to F9
F5:white+activated carbon:150g/㎡
F6:green+activated carbon:150g/㎡
F7:pink+activated carbon:150g/㎡
F8:yellow +activated carbon:150g/㎡
Thickness:0.2-6 mm or Customized
Strand Thickness:0.5-8mm
Swd:2.5-100mm Lwd: 4.5-200mm
Surface Treatment:Powder Coated,Galvanized
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