Soda blasting does a very nice job of remove years of paint and leaving the substrate clean and not warping the metal. However the potential paint failures associated with this method of stripping. There are two big issues to address.
How do you remove the Soda residue from the metal.
Unfortunate there is only one way and that is with water. Soda is water soluble, wax and grease remove or enamel reducer will not remove it. Warm or hot soapy water with a sotch brite and preferably using a pressure washer to rince is the best way I have found to remove the soda.
Second issue is water accelerates oxidation or rust.
No matter how fast you get the metal dry, oxidation has started. It is very difficult to see the oxidation, but it has started. If you know what you are looking for you can detect the tingeing of the metal. So what options do you have. - chemical and mechanical.
Metal conditioners can be used but remember they also must be converted and water must be used as a rinse. I have seen this process not done very successfully unless it is a very small spot and you are then limited with what top coat you will apply after that process.
So the other option is mechanical abrasion. Sanding, wire wheel, sandblast, etc. This is time consuming and defeats the soda blasting.
I have done the soda blasting thing and I had good results but only because I put allot of prep time in the metal after it was soda blasted. I took one panel at a time and after washing it I guide coated the metal and DA sanded every inch. Wire wheel and sandblasting was used in the tight areas.
Other things to consider is make sure to have clean dry air and wear cotton gloves so you do not contaminate the metal. Do one panel at a time and finish it in primer before moving on to the next.
I have seen many paint jobs fail because they were not prepped properly after soda blasted. It really leaves the metal in a nice finish but it does not remove all the labor as everyone thinks it will. I agree plastic media is a much better option.