OP
OccupantRJ
Well-known member
Blast cabinet media for thin sheet metal.
Thank youRent a 90 cfm or larger diesel powered one and a commercial pressure blast pot. Spend the money on a good rental setup, this way you're the only hold up and not the lack of air.
Cardboard/tape everything you don't want full of media, use good PPE.
I was playing with injecting air at an abrasive mix valve to improve general flow. I have an attachment for wet blasting with a pressure washer, but I was less than impressed by it. It could likely be improved by using a HF blaster pot at a very low pressure to supply grit to the wet blast nozzle versus trying to essentially **** sand out of a bucket.RJ, I saw you had done some testing with water injection, did you ever do anything further? I am will need to keep the dust down and it seems like a good idea. Clemco offers a full fancy upgrade to my pot, but it is $5k I have seen the ones that mix downstream and I think that is an awful idea. My local guy has one that mixes at the end of the hose and doesn't use a pressure washer, guessing it will pull do to Venturi effect?? The is about $700 and then there is a pressure washer based unit that injects right at the end of the line, this one was somewhere closer to $1500. Any thoughts? Or anyone else have any input or experience?
I was getting to about that point with my portable sandblasting rig and 110 cfm compressor when I started having trouble with my knees from arthritis, so ended up selling the rig. I do think that injecting water at the output at a very acute angle very close to the blast nozzle would be a very feasible thing to do.I had a correction on my post, it was $500 not $1500 for the pressure washer attachment. The pressure washer units that **** sand up are no fun, we tried that too. It worked, but you were constantly fighting the clogging.
I am only talking about using a pressure pot style and then injecting water right at the end. I also some some adapters on eBay that were even cheaper.
That makes perfect sense, I am going to talk to the manufacturer of the pressure washer unit and then see if the local guy has anyone that purchased the unit he sells, would be nice to talk to a customer about this before buying it.Strouty, in my opinion, starting the blast flow before opening the water valve would be critical to keep water from migrating into the grit hose. Conversely, closing the water valve before stopping grit flow would also apply.
Interesting……I have a 2 hp electric Cat pump setup in my storage barn looking for something to do. I think it is a commercial car wash pump.
Sounds like a worthwhile projectInteresting……I have a 2 hp electric Cat pump setup in my storage barn looking for something to do. I think it is a commercial car wash pump.
That is the type pump that was on my first electric pressure washer.Sounds like a worthwhile project
This one uses one of the 'Hypro' piston pumps, they have been around forever
My friend has a similar cleaner to that in his automotive machine shop
Well, I'll bet ya $1000 it's a Quincy. But they all look similar thru a size range so with just that pic, no telling if it'sHelp id this pump?