Dry ice dusting cleans books and removes vinyl lettering with sugar-sized particles at lower pressures.
Traditional dry ice blasting (up to 150 PSI) removes failing coatings with rice-sized particles.
We use high-pressure dry ice blasting (up to 300 PSI) when traditional dry ice blasting won't work.
Choice of nozzles, blast pressure, distance from surface, blast angle and especially operator technique will determine the results obtained with the different types of dry ice blasting equipment.
@willmjm Cured automotive paint is much harder and durable than the vinyl used for logos. It'd be easy enough to adjust the PSI and nozzle to strip the vinyl and leave the paint unharmed :)
Unlike ice blasting, Sponge jet (as shown in a sponge jet video) cuts into the underlying substrate. Ice blasting does not damage the underlying substrate in any way leaving it intact. For preservation work Ice blasting is the only way to go. Residue can be cleaned up just as easy as having to clean up the Sponge Jet residue.
Does it make sense to use this procuct when removing lead paint and soot from fires. NO. You are not "removing" it, you are only blowing it off to another area. Sponge Jet actually "removes" contaminants from the substrate and successfully contains it for discard.
dude looks like Sean Penn
IgnoredComment 1 year ago
Very cool!
N8Ryder 1 year ago
Dry ice dusting cleans books and removes vinyl lettering with sugar-sized particles at lower pressures.
Traditional dry ice blasting (up to 150 PSI) removes failing coatings with rice-sized particles.
We use high-pressure dry ice blasting (up to 300 PSI) when traditional dry ice blasting won't work.
Choice of nozzles, blast pressure, distance from surface, blast angle and especially operator technique will determine the results obtained with the different types of dry ice blasting equipment.
Coldsweepinc 1 year ago
If this removes paint without damaging the substrate material how is it that at 3:51 its removing vinyl but not the paint?
willmjm 1 year ago
Comment removed
roopysdm 1 year ago
This has been flagged as spam show
@willmjm Cured automotive paint is much harder and durable than the vinyl used for logos. It'd be easy enough to adjust the PSI and nozzle to strip the vinyl and leave the paint unharmed :)
roopysdm 1 year ago
where would i buy a dry ice blasting kit in ireland secondhand or new ?
TheEvan2011 1 year ago
@TheEvan2011 tesco
ryanmail2004 1 year ago
Unlike ice blasting, Sponge jet (as shown in a sponge jet video) cuts into the underlying substrate. Ice blasting does not damage the underlying substrate in any way leaving it intact. For preservation work Ice blasting is the only way to go. Residue can be cleaned up just as easy as having to clean up the Sponge Jet residue.
bludbot2 1 year ago
Does it make sense to use this procuct when removing lead paint and soot from fires. NO. You are not "removing" it, you are only blowing it off to another area. Sponge Jet actually "removes" contaminants from the substrate and successfully contains it for discard.
enviromediaman 1 year ago
Comment removed
FoxPower2009 2 years ago
booooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
jamie8346 2 years ago
That is soooo cool
suberbinsnipa 3 years ago
oh no co2 think of the trees
joekuta 3 years ago
what are you talking about?
coldjet2 3 years ago
Um... Trees fix CO2 (as in liberate the O2 and use the carbon atoms to develop sugar) during photosynthesis... Shouldn't this be good for trees?
xiebur 1 year ago
this is what i do for a living. do you know if they refinished the pieces in the state capitol afterward
adventchild5150 3 years ago
How much to franchise? I want to start up outside the USA.
Fire4FX 3 years ago
no secondary waste? co2
lexichronicle 3 years ago
LOL RIGHT?
waefct 3 years ago
dude dry ice=co2...
dunnobutwayne 3 years ago
i want one
meatywang 4 years ago