Menards carries a few different ones, I think this was actually a mix of the black blast from tech mix and some multi purpose utility sand. not to mention any garbage that I swept off the concrete that made it through my screed. :)
I know. I'm not 100% sure where the perfect cfm is on this. I've tried using an industrial blaster, it works, but it's pretty aggressive and you have to keep moving.
@@jrsprojects786 Jet size + PSI setting determines your cfm, which in turn determines speed. By choosing less aggressive media, high flow rate and low psi you can be gentle but work fast.
Soak them in concentrated degreaser, and or ultrasonic parts cleaner. Takes 10 min. My hobby is making lincoln wheel center caps look new again from the junk yard and resell them.
Nice job bro! What media did you use?
Menards carries a few different ones, I think this was actually a mix of the black blast from tech mix and some multi purpose utility sand. not to mention any garbage that I swept off the concrete that made it through my screed. :)
Fantastic!
Is that a 1/4" hose? If so you are only blasting at around 2-4 cfm. You need at-least 12 to blast, 200 cfm you would be rocking....
I know. I'm not 100% sure where the perfect cfm is on this. I've tried using an industrial blaster, it works, but it's pretty aggressive and you have to keep moving.
@@jrsprojects786 Jet size + PSI setting determines your cfm, which in turn determines speed. By choosing less aggressive media, high flow rate and low psi you can be gentle but work fast.
Soak them in concentrated degreaser, and or ultrasonic parts cleaner. Takes 10 min. My hobby is making lincoln wheel center caps look new again from the junk yard and resell them.
that sounds like a sweet idea. How big of parts cleaner do you have? would rims fit?