Hey all you sand blasting gurus,
We're about to take on a lettering job in Aluminum that will have a prismatic
top face. 3/8"the Alum w/ most strokes @ 1/2~3/4" wide. Some parts could be
as small as 1/4", a font resembling Times roman. We usually send out
alum letters for polishing and they sandblast the sides. We grain the faces
so why cant we blast edges in house?
Anyways...
This would be a prismatic top face that has slopes from the middle &
go down about 1/2 way. Plan on using a ball nose w/ the cnc. BN's usually
leave slight 'ridges' along its path. We would like to know instead of hand sanding
will sand blasting be better to knock down the ridges/lines. We're not looking
to do a mirror finsh, they would primed then painted.
Here's an idea. Pretend it's not finished and needs a smoothing.
Basically how the letters would be shaped
Blasting seems it would cut prep time down considerably.
Yes, the backs would be either by hand or some rotary contraption
to knock down the fuzz/sharpies.
If the above is doable, what abrasive type & grits are needed?
Btw, we dont have a sandblast cabinet yet. Is this one decent?
The size inside seems spacious, which would help us on certain things.
USA 966 Pro Finisher Abrasive Blast Cabinet
Also, we're just looking to add an SBC to clean up alum/acrylic projects
and other things that need a blastin. Nothing mad dirty like oily stuff or auto parts.
Please, no Harbor Freight. I live 2 blocks from it and the rubber smell....
Thanks all
Ronnie
We're about to take on a lettering job in Aluminum that will have a prismatic
top face. 3/8"the Alum w/ most strokes @ 1/2~3/4" wide. Some parts could be
as small as 1/4", a font resembling Times roman. We usually send out
alum letters for polishing and they sandblast the sides. We grain the faces
so why cant we blast edges in house?
Anyways...
This would be a prismatic top face that has slopes from the middle &
go down about 1/2 way. Plan on using a ball nose w/ the cnc. BN's usually
leave slight 'ridges' along its path. We would like to know instead of hand sanding
will sand blasting be better to knock down the ridges/lines. We're not looking
to do a mirror finsh, they would primed then painted.
Here's an idea. Pretend it's not finished and needs a smoothing.
Basically how the letters would be shaped
Blasting seems it would cut prep time down considerably.
Yes, the backs would be either by hand or some rotary contraption
to knock down the fuzz/sharpies.
If the above is doable, what abrasive type & grits are needed?
Btw, we dont have a sandblast cabinet yet. Is this one decent?
The size inside seems spacious, which would help us on certain things.
USA 966 Pro Finisher Abrasive Blast Cabinet
Also, we're just looking to add an SBC to clean up alum/acrylic projects
and other things that need a blastin. Nothing mad dirty like oily stuff or auto parts.
Please, no Harbor Freight. I live 2 blocks from it and the rubber smell....
Thanks all
Ronnie
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