Can anyone give me an idea on what to expect time wise on sandblasting a new pipe I am use to blasting metal but not briar....
just a brief overview and I am sure I can pick it up
Thanks
sandblasting
sandblasting
Listen.... you can't live long enough to make all your own mistakes !
Charles E. Davis
Charles E. Davis
- KurtHuhn
- Site Admin
- Posts: 5326
- Joined: Thu Nov 23, 2006 8:00 pm
- Location: United States/Rhode Island
Re: sandblasting
A whole lot more of the briar will end up as dust.
That's really about it. It's tough to talk about, but easy to demonstrate, if you know what I mean. Keep the gun moving, and depending on your orifice size you're going to want to hold the pipe further away. If you've ever blasted glass, you know that if you hold the gun in one spot for too long, the piece you're working on will shatter. On pipes, you'll just dig through to the other side in a real hurry. When you're first starting, use scrap pieces of briar to get used to the way it works - you don't want to ruin a perfectly serviceable pipe. And the wood will give a different blast depending on how you hold the gun - perpendicular, with, or against the grain.
Other than that, it's mostly experimentation.
That's really about it. It's tough to talk about, but easy to demonstrate, if you know what I mean. Keep the gun moving, and depending on your orifice size you're going to want to hold the pipe further away. If you've ever blasted glass, you know that if you hold the gun in one spot for too long, the piece you're working on will shatter. On pipes, you'll just dig through to the other side in a real hurry. When you're first starting, use scrap pieces of briar to get used to the way it works - you don't want to ruin a perfectly serviceable pipe. And the wood will give a different blast depending on how you hold the gun - perpendicular, with, or against the grain.
Other than that, it's mostly experimentation.
Re: sandblasting
I think it depends on your media, your pressure, and your expectations. It takes me about an 45 minutes to an hour to blast a pipe evenly, but I'm not trying to get crazy depth and my rig runs around 95 PSI which is well short of a good setup.
ALL YOUR PIPE ARE BELONG TO US!
- baweaverpipes
- The Awesomer
- Posts: 947
- Joined: Tue Dec 19, 2006 8:07 am
- Location: Franklin, Tennessee
- Contact:
Re: sandblasting
An hour? That's way too much time. What are you using, fairy dust?Sasquatch wrote:I think it depends on your media, your pressure, and your expectations. It takes me about an 45 minutes to an hour to blast a pipe evenly, but I'm not trying to get crazy depth and my rig runs around 95 PSI which is well short of a good setup.
If you're running @ 95 psi, try a smaller nozzle.
Re: sandblasting
Nah Kurt sold me a big bag of rice but he said it was the best thing to use but it means I have to have a big nozzle on.
ALL YOUR PIPE ARE BELONG TO US!
- KurtHuhn
- Site Admin
- Posts: 5326
- Joined: Thu Nov 23, 2006 8:00 pm
- Location: United States/Rhode Island
Re: sandblasting
Nozzle shmozzle. I run mine without. Biggest orifice around!
- KurtHuhn
- Site Admin
- Posts: 5326
- Joined: Thu Nov 23, 2006 8:00 pm
- Location: United States/Rhode Island
Re: sandblasting
Damn straight!
/me does orifice dance
/me does orifice dance
- baweaverpipes
- The Awesomer
- Posts: 947
- Joined: Tue Dec 19, 2006 8:07 am
- Location: Franklin, Tennessee
- Contact:
Re: sandblasting
Although he has been absent from this forum for a while and I hate to disagree with you but, we all know that Thad Johnston is the biggest orifice aroundSasquatch wrote:Kurt Huhn - the biggest orifice I know.