lbhsbz
Well-known member
For years I've had a HF benchtop blast cabinet (the red one) and it has been mostly useless. I recently started a business where I need to blast lots of castings so I ordered the skat blast pick-up tube and gun, which works amazing, when there is abrasive over the end of the tube. It seems after 3 or 4 minutes, all the abrasive is piled up around the sides and the suction tube just draws mostly air. Growing tired of shoving my hand in there to rearrange the abrasive, (and growing tired of all the leaks, even though I sealed the hell out of it), I found a US made Kelco 24-24 benchtop cabinet for sale locally for $300. I figured it would be better, since it's made by a blast cabinet company....it is, but marginally.
It's constructed of 3/16" steel and has about is 6" deeper hopper with a greater slope on the sides than the HF cabinet, but still suffers from the same problem....about 3 minutes in and I'm out of abrasive and have to rearrange it.
I think the problem is twofold...
1: Inadequate slope on the sides of the hopper due to the contraints of a benchtop sized machine
2: Inadequate space between the grate and the top of the abrasive pile, causing the blasting action to blow the abrasive away under the grate where the gun is usually pointed (middle of the grate to the back of the cabinet) and pile up in the front corners and everywhere else other than where it should be.
What's my solution here? I currently have 50 lbs of aluminum oxide in it.
I don't need a benchtop machine, so I'm thinking making the hopper a foot or 2 deeper, which will increase the angle of the walls so abrasive won't pile up, and will likely allow me to have the same amount of abrasive (50lbs or so) in the machine with at least 1 or 2 feet between the grate and the top of the abrasive pile...reducing "blowout" (for lack of a better term) and also probably wasting less abrasive since it won't be getting blown around in into the dust collector. I'm thinking this will fix it, but there may be a simpler solution that I haven't thought of.
any ideas?
It's constructed of 3/16" steel and has about is 6" deeper hopper with a greater slope on the sides than the HF cabinet, but still suffers from the same problem....about 3 minutes in and I'm out of abrasive and have to rearrange it.
I think the problem is twofold...
1: Inadequate slope on the sides of the hopper due to the contraints of a benchtop sized machine
2: Inadequate space between the grate and the top of the abrasive pile, causing the blasting action to blow the abrasive away under the grate where the gun is usually pointed (middle of the grate to the back of the cabinet) and pile up in the front corners and everywhere else other than where it should be.
What's my solution here? I currently have 50 lbs of aluminum oxide in it.
I don't need a benchtop machine, so I'm thinking making the hopper a foot or 2 deeper, which will increase the angle of the walls so abrasive won't pile up, and will likely allow me to have the same amount of abrasive (50lbs or so) in the machine with at least 1 or 2 feet between the grate and the top of the abrasive pile...reducing "blowout" (for lack of a better term) and also probably wasting less abrasive since it won't be getting blown around in into the dust collector. I'm thinking this will fix it, but there may be a simpler solution that I haven't thought of.
any ideas?