STROIL
Member
- Joined
- Apr 7, 2012
- Messages
- 26
- Location
- Vernon, Illinois
- Tractor
- Ford 8n, case 1840 skidsteer, brushcat, vermeer backhoe attchment, 72" smooth bucket, 60" toothed bucket, KK 5 foot BB
I have a bunch of restoration projects to do on various painted parts of my tractors, Skidsteer, attachments, other tools, etc. I have done limited sand blasting on small parts in the past with the little "suction bucket" cheapo sand blasters (HF still sells one of these). I plan to buy a decent sized pressure pot sandblasting rig from HF. I have an abrasives supplier nearby that sells a wide variety of all the specialty blasting abrasives including soda, and they are good with advice on which to use for which application, and the stuff is not terribly expensive. One of the questions I have is what psi and cfm do you guys that have lots of blasting experience think I will need to use to efficiently blast off old paint and rust? I've used my regular 30 gallon, 5 horsepower, single-cylinder compressor at 100psi in the past. Not sure what the CFM of that compressor is. With the little suction pot blasters, it's pretty slow going. Clearly not enough CFM. So if I go out to buy a new compressor to max out my sandblasting ability, what CFM am I looking for?
Also, I plan to do the blasting out in the open air of my 30 acre rural property. I'll spread out about a 20x20ft area of heavy 4ml plastic and blast out in the middle of that. I'll wear a very-good respirator and a full face shield. The plan would be to blast one part, then move everything off the plastic sheet, and then pick the sheet up in a way to force all the abrasive to the middle, and recapture as much abrasive as possible. I realize all of the blasted off crap will be mixed in with the recaptured abrasive, but is that any reason to not re-use it? any abrasive that blows away in the wind... so what? It's not like I'll be doing so much of this that I will create a desert on my property.
If you're a guy that has lots of sand-blasting experience, I'm interested in hearing what you think of that approach and any other sandblasting advice you got. Thanks!
Also, I plan to do the blasting out in the open air of my 30 acre rural property. I'll spread out about a 20x20ft area of heavy 4ml plastic and blast out in the middle of that. I'll wear a very-good respirator and a full face shield. The plan would be to blast one part, then move everything off the plastic sheet, and then pick the sheet up in a way to force all the abrasive to the middle, and recapture as much abrasive as possible. I realize all of the blasted off crap will be mixed in with the recaptured abrasive, but is that any reason to not re-use it? any abrasive that blows away in the wind... so what? It's not like I'll be doing so much of this that I will create a desert on my property.
If you're a guy that has lots of sand-blasting experience, I'm interested in hearing what you think of that approach and any other sandblasting advice you got. Thanks!
