I found Super Cheap carry grit in small buckets. Ok for little stuff in one of those cabinets you can buy.
Garnet is a good media but may be too agressive for soft surfaces. I go to a local sandblasting place and they let me fill a bucket from the floor of the blast room. It needs to be run through a stocking as the paint flecks in it will cause blockages in the pick up line.
That said, I only blast small items at home - I find it a lot quicker to take anything larger than a brake drum down to the local blasting shop and he puts a coat of industrial primer on at the same time.
I found Super Cheap carry grit in small buckets. Ok for little stuff in one of those cabinets you can buy.
i have a five gallon drum of beads and garnet which you can have, but you have to pick it up.
and as for the what to use
1 not beach sand -too much salt, you only implant what you are trying to get rid of.
2 glass beads are thr perfect finish, various grades, but you need a compressor that can handle the work.
He bought the place in 1979 and did the job shortly after. The house had probably not been painted since before WWII and would have been lead based paint. No blaster in the yellow pages would touch the job. The guy who did it was, as I wrote, a fly by night, recommended by a mate of a mate of a mate in the pub and wanted folding. Council regs even then forbade blasting on site except under stringent conditions. I saw the job afterwards and was impressed by the cleanliness of the timber, but not by the mess left behind.
Media blasting is not a cure all. I bought a pallet jack at an auction of a fibreglass manufacturer which had been used to hold and move bits being spray glassed. It was covered in many thick coats of glass and resin. The blasting could only chip around the edges. I finally cleaned it by cracking the coatings with a sledge hammer and chiselling off any difficult bits.
URSUSMAJOR
95 300 Tdi Defender 90
99 300 Tdi Defender 110
92 Discovery 200tdi
50 Series 1 80
50 Series 1 80
www.reads4x4.com
Really well you learn a new thing every day. I want to do rims and then the camper trailer so i don't want anything that will weeken stuff. I thought it would just striop the rust and paint and was a lazy way to do it rather than a sander, also easer to get into those smaller places
95 300 Tdi Defender 90
99 300 Tdi Defender 110
92 Discovery 200tdi
50 Series 1 80
50 Series 1 80
www.reads4x4.com
It probably is suitable for that purpose, but you need to consider both the media used and the size of the particles - it is the larger particles such as steel shot or large grains of grit that can affect the surface properties of the steel - and you use these when that is what you want to do, for example to work harden the surface, which you probably don't want with wheels (probably immaterial with the trailer).
John
John
JDNSW
1986 110 County 3.9 diesel
1970 2a 109 2.25 petrol
95 300 Tdi Defender 90
99 300 Tdi Defender 110
92 Discovery 200tdi
50 Series 1 80
50 Series 1 80
www.reads4x4.com
| Search AULRO.com ONLY! |
Search All the Web! |
|---|
|
|
|
Bookmarks