EddieHollywood
New Member
Hi and thanks for any help.
I am wanting to start making sandblasting small cedar signs in the size of 7 to 9 inch by 24 inch long.
I am looking at blast cabs, pots and so on for this but have many ?s on this i could use some help on.
If i am blasting a 7 inch by 24 inch cedar sign with two lines of text and a small dab of art work on it what would be the best grit size and psi to be blasting at to get it done fast but also looking good?
Also how long should it take to blast something this size a 1/4 inch in the wood for the larger letters and more of a surface etch for the art work that is fine or 1/4 for larger art work.?
Also i am thinking of using [FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]Aluminum Oxide or [/FONT][FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]Silicon Carbide i have read they can be used over and over many times is that true for blasting cedar as well - i read this on a glass blasting site.
I am looking at a 50 to 100 pound pot to use with what ever blast cab i end up with and a good air filter system and dust cyclone to add in before the air filter system.
and a foot pedal control.
On glass carving sites they say i can use a smaller pen sized micro blaster to do the blasting and i have seen some good looking results but not many as they are glass sites also i am not sure how deep they are getting it.
Can i use a macro system for doing this? that would save a lot of blasting abrasive?
Or what would be the better choice to use and why?
Or should i use or can i use both large for the letters i want deeper and macro for the more small detailed stuff? can they both be hooked up to the same system and use the same grit?
I would like to knock them out fast for a tourist location doing custom signs up to 12 to 15 a day on the week ends and less on week days.
I have a 24 inch vinyl cutter all ready to cut quick one off designs and all the software.
Here is some of the things i am looking at for this. I would like to also get into the basic glass stuff to like names on beer mugs and any [/FONT][FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]tourist quick sell items[/FONT].
[FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]
I am thinking about this Cab it is a sit down cab as i will be it it a lot.. what do you think about this cab?
http://www.dichroicimagery.com/prod...=7750&osCsid=7d14f05785e3aaa84382d5e31dd9ad4b
or this one
http://www.harborfreight.com/40-lb-capacity-floor-blast-cabinet-93608.html
this added on before the air filter to help knock out the dust before it even gets to the filter.
http://www.oneida-air.com/category.asp?Id={CC6B6F2A-E3D7-4F18-A53C-B5C357DFE131}
this dust collector
http://www.etchmaster.com/Merchant2...de=ES&Product_Code=300187&Category_Code=EQ_DC
this 100 pound pot.
http://www.etchmaster.com/Merchant2...=ES&Product_Code=300105&Category_Code=EQ_2533
and still looking at compressors and other items.
[/FONT]
I am wanting to start making sandblasting small cedar signs in the size of 7 to 9 inch by 24 inch long.
I am looking at blast cabs, pots and so on for this but have many ?s on this i could use some help on.
If i am blasting a 7 inch by 24 inch cedar sign with two lines of text and a small dab of art work on it what would be the best grit size and psi to be blasting at to get it done fast but also looking good?
Also how long should it take to blast something this size a 1/4 inch in the wood for the larger letters and more of a surface etch for the art work that is fine or 1/4 for larger art work.?
Also i am thinking of using [FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]Aluminum Oxide or [/FONT][FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]Silicon Carbide i have read they can be used over and over many times is that true for blasting cedar as well - i read this on a glass blasting site.
I am looking at a 50 to 100 pound pot to use with what ever blast cab i end up with and a good air filter system and dust cyclone to add in before the air filter system.
and a foot pedal control.
On glass carving sites they say i can use a smaller pen sized micro blaster to do the blasting and i have seen some good looking results but not many as they are glass sites also i am not sure how deep they are getting it.
Can i use a macro system for doing this? that would save a lot of blasting abrasive?
Or what would be the better choice to use and why?
Or should i use or can i use both large for the letters i want deeper and macro for the more small detailed stuff? can they both be hooked up to the same system and use the same grit?
I would like to knock them out fast for a tourist location doing custom signs up to 12 to 15 a day on the week ends and less on week days.
I have a 24 inch vinyl cutter all ready to cut quick one off designs and all the software.
Here is some of the things i am looking at for this. I would like to also get into the basic glass stuff to like names on beer mugs and any [/FONT][FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]tourist quick sell items[/FONT].
[FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]
I am thinking about this Cab it is a sit down cab as i will be it it a lot.. what do you think about this cab?
http://www.dichroicimagery.com/prod...=7750&osCsid=7d14f05785e3aaa84382d5e31dd9ad4b
or this one
http://www.harborfreight.com/40-lb-capacity-floor-blast-cabinet-93608.html
this added on before the air filter to help knock out the dust before it even gets to the filter.
http://www.oneida-air.com/category.asp?Id={CC6B6F2A-E3D7-4F18-A53C-B5C357DFE131}
this dust collector
http://www.etchmaster.com/Merchant2...de=ES&Product_Code=300187&Category_Code=EQ_DC
this 100 pound pot.
http://www.etchmaster.com/Merchant2...=ES&Product_Code=300105&Category_Code=EQ_2533
and still looking at compressors and other items.
[/FONT]