Dry ice blasting vs Sandblasting
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All Comments (23)
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my company does heavy abrasive blasting on steel chassis and steel dump bodies for commercial vehicles, where can i find information for heavy duty dry ice blasting???
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this process is great for mold remediation,, ,, got mold damage in the house,, the price of the machine to get rid if it can cost the same as hiring someone to use the machine to get rid of it
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@suedepolo whos the idiot, i didn't reccomend blasting the one spot for an excesssive amount of time. if you read correctly i said the only way the blasting would wear away the steel was too blast the same area continuously. who said anything about the automotive trade. there is probably a reason why your no long an abrasive blaster cuz ur a tool.
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@187skitzo You are an idiot. Yes paint does adhere to rough surface better than a smooth one, however just blasting away in one spot will cause your paint look like shit in that area. You will be able to see every imperfection from the blasting process hence why its just about obsolete in the automotive world. Btw I was an abrasive blaster and painter for protherm an industrial painting and blasting company so dont try and bullshit me.
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ok, whats the CO2 downside? you realize that this is frozen CO2 right?
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How much for the ice and blaster?
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You don't think the factory paint had a good grip on smooth metal?
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Picking away at the substrate... this is called a profile! this is what the paint sticks too. seriously the only way it will wear away is if you continualy blast the steel after the paint is gone. even then its minimal.
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@b3rkut Correct
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Using dry ice blasting, I assume that you still need to clean up off the floor whatever is being removed...? So if you were removing paint from a surface, you would still need to sweep up the paint particles on the floor. Correct?
its like space invaders
superman53144 2 years ago 19
wouldnt the paint get a better grip with sandblasting?
angryfishcake 3 years ago 12