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So....I found a corner of the garage for a sandblasting cabinet (or as Kel called it, "the humidicrib")

But despite the name, I guess sand may not be the right thing to put in it.

So....I need to do regular car cleaning stuff....

what should I use, and where do I get it?

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As the guys have said it all depends on what sort of profile you need, Hare and Forbes are awesome BTW

Garnet will give a very good profile for painting provided the air-pressure is up to scratch, our old blaster was getting 10 micron profile, then we boosted it and could get a deadly 75 micron....beautiful for long term coating adhesion and letting etch primers get right into the metal.

Glass beads are good, but more suited for taking coatings off, and not for hard-core surface prepping, same for bicarb...which is nice and gentle and works on delicate substrates even plastics.

The king-kong of media is silicon carbide, it can be overkill on anything but the most hardened alloys or things that need some serious stripping. Silicon Carbide DES46 from A E Baker & Co

The thing to remember is never trust the sealing of the unit and always wear a proper dust mask/filter, I use a full-face Sundstrom SR 200

Secondly, always cover the glass observation panel with plastic laminate pouches of similar; something that can be replaced after the blast media has scored it, you just simply tape on a new bit of plastic instead of destroying your nice glass panel.

The harder the media = the quicker the nozel will need replacing.

And a decent compressor with an awesome capacity will save time and headache.

The guys here will give you good advice based on your requirements - www.blastech.com.au

Edited by 666DAN
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