


A furniture painting and baking room is a device for applying paint and dye to equipment surfaces and drying them. It not only enhances the aesthetic appeal of the equipment but also protects the items, solving the issues of paint fumes and low baking temperatures in the working environment for users.
The furniture baking paint room is typically divided into two sections: the spray painting room and the baking paint room, with the entire baking paint room being a modular structure. The room body is constructed with interlocking thermal spraying wall panels, ensuring good sealing and insulation properties, making it convenient for staff to enter and exit; the door is framed with aluminum alloy. A low-noise, high-airflow fan is selected to ensure the perfection of the painting effect.
During painting, external air is filtered through a primary filter and then sent to the roof by a fan. It is further filtered and purified through a top filter before entering the room. The air inside the room flows downwards at a speed of 0.2-0.3 m/s in a full descent manner, ensuring that paint mist particles do not linger in the air and are directly exhausted through the bottom outlet. This continuous cycle maintains the air cleanliness in the room at over 98% during painting. The introduced air also has a certain pressure, forming a consistent airflow around the furniture to remove excess paint, thereby maximizing the quality of the painted finish.
During the baking paint process, set the switch to the baking paint position, and the temperature inside the baking room will quickly rise to the pre-set drying temperature (40℃-60℃). Then, apply the paint to the furniture. Once the baking time reaches the set duration, the baking paint room will automatically shut off, indicating the end of the baking paint process.






























