Jim Stabe
Well-known member
The thing I enjoy most about this site is seeing what everyone actually MAKES in their shops - the Creators rather than the collectors. There have been some very inspirational threads on the subject of homemade tools but nothing in quite a while so post up your latest creations.
I'll start with a sand blaster I built to cut down the windshield glass for my MG project. I had used pressure blasters before but the things used a huge amount of abrasive and were always plugging up. I had seen references to plans online for a "pressure assist" blaster that was supposed to solve the problems with regular pressure blasters. I tried contacting the guy to purchase the plans but was never able to contact him so I looked at several pictures and read descriptions and designed my own. I must have done it right because it works great. The theory is that you use a gun from one of the old suction style blasters ( the ones that used air flow to supposedly siphon sand out of a bucket and blast parts) Home Depot online for $10. You then pressureize the sand hopper with low pressure air (7-10 psi) to move the abrasive through the feed tube to the gun. It really works slick. Here is a schematic.
View attachment schematic.pdf
I made the hopper from a discarded air tank that I cut the end off of and welded it back on backwards to provide a filling basin. The welds aren't critical because there is less than 10 psi in the tank. I put a water separator / regulator on the inlet air line to remove moisture and regulate air to the gun to about 65 psi ($30 online). A second regulator drops the pressure to 7 - 10 psi to pressurize the tank ($10 Surplus Center).


I'll start with a sand blaster I built to cut down the windshield glass for my MG project. I had used pressure blasters before but the things used a huge amount of abrasive and were always plugging up. I had seen references to plans online for a "pressure assist" blaster that was supposed to solve the problems with regular pressure blasters. I tried contacting the guy to purchase the plans but was never able to contact him so I looked at several pictures and read descriptions and designed my own. I must have done it right because it works great. The theory is that you use a gun from one of the old suction style blasters ( the ones that used air flow to supposedly siphon sand out of a bucket and blast parts) Home Depot online for $10. You then pressureize the sand hopper with low pressure air (7-10 psi) to move the abrasive through the feed tube to the gun. It really works slick. Here is a schematic.
View attachment schematic.pdf
I made the hopper from a discarded air tank that I cut the end off of and welded it back on backwards to provide a filling basin. The welds aren't critical because there is less than 10 psi in the tank. I put a water separator / regulator on the inlet air line to remove moisture and regulate air to the gun to about 65 psi ($30 online). A second regulator drops the pressure to 7 - 10 psi to pressurize the tank ($10 Surplus Center).

