[AT] Classic Blast
james deardorff
jdeardorffsupct at yahoo.com
Tue Jan 11 07:55:05 PST 2005
Bruce,
Received your e-mail. Here are some answers to your questions.
-Yes, I do change the original blend after using 10 times. The aluminum oxide loses I estimate
5% of its mass per application, there seems to be no effect on the walnut shells mass up to
100 uses. So, after 10 uses I usually add 25 lbs of aluminum oxide per 8 hour day. From
my use of this process over the last 8 years it seems by adding this amount per day you never
run out of productive material. (I run the used media through the cleaner I built after every
use to remove dust and paint chips).
-I usually set my presure at 35psi (pot pressure) for cars and 45 to 50 psi for tractors. Nozzle
distance from a surface approximately 12 to 15 inches at a 30 to 45 degree angle. For deep
pit rust I do a primary blast at a 45 degree angle to remove old paint and surface rust, then
I do a 2nd blast at 90 degrees to the surface to get out the pit rust. I have developed a "feel"
for how much pressure to use on thin gauge metals. I lay my hand on the metal and
feel the vibration. I have done enough jobs to be able to judge pressure setting by this vibration.
-My customers and myself have always be amazed at the way this media blend can prevent
rusting for extended periods of time (I have heard reports over a year). I beleive there are
several reasons for this. First, I do not produce excessive roughness like regular blasting.
(usually less than 1 mil, 1000 th of an inch). This gives moisture less area to bond with.
I have talked to several people at the Univ of Missouri about a walnut residue preventing rust.
because of the number of times I reuse the blend that there could be much
walnut tanic oil deposited on the metal surface. A phd told me that it only takes a layer one
atom thick to stop rust. Also, there is no negative effect on paint because there is a greater
attraction to the paint than the tanic oil. I have talked to NASA's Surface Contamination
Analysis Technology (SCAT Team) at Marshall Space Flight Center about this phenomenon.
They are interested in testing this process as a cheap and simple way reduce underfilm
corrosion activity for protective coating systems. I have always felt that the use of this
type of cleaning could double the service life of most paint systems especially in harsh
chemical environments like fertilizer facilities.
I have written a 10 page paper on Classic Blast. Send me an address & I will send you a
copy.
Jim Deardorff
---------------------------------
Do you Yahoo!?
Yahoo! Mail - now with 250MB free storage. Learn more.
More information about the AT
mailing list