Coima USA DEF Paint Sludge Separator
Booth water picks up paint with every pass, and the DEF exists so that water can stay in service instead of becoming waste. It pulls the paint out as a bagged sludge and sends the cleaned water straight back to the booth. The sections below explain the chemistry, the handling, and how much each cycle treats.
Chemistry Does the Separating
Dirty water enters a reaction tank, available in PVC or stainless steel. There, a flocculant binds the suspended paint particles into clumps heavy enough to sink, and the paint settles to the bottom of the tank.
Sludge in a Bag, Water Back in the Loop
The settled sludge collects in a polypropylene container bag, so removal means lifting out a bag. A pump, supplied with the unit, returns the purified water to the painting booth and closes the loop.
Cycle Capacity
Each decanting cycle treats from 1,000 to 4,000 liters (about 264 to 1,057 gallons).
Specifications
| Function | Separation of paint particles contained in water |
|---|---|
| Reaction tank | PVC or stainless steel |
| Process | Flocculant reaction; agglomeration and precipitation of particles |
| Sludge collection | Polypropylene container bag |
| Water return | Recirculated to the painting booth via supplied pump |
| Treatment capacity | 1,000 to 4,000 liters per decanting cycle (about 264 to 1,057 gallons) |
| Model series | DEF |
Contact 360 Degree Machinery
Call 630-229-6705 or request a quote online and we will match the DEF’s tank material and cycle capacity to your booth.
