Precision Blasting Overview
Unlike structural blasting, restoration requires a "zero-damage" technical approach. The goal is to remove paint, carbon, or oxidation without altering the underlying metallurgy. This demands lower pressures, specialized media, and often, wet-blasting methodologies to buffer the abrasive impact.
1. Non-Destructive Logic
Utilizing Glass Bead media to peen the surface rather than cutting it. This creates a bright, "as-new" finish on aluminum engine blocks and alloy wheels.
2. Low-Pressure Control
Employing Short Venturi Nozzles at reduced pressures (40-60 PSI) to maintain technical control over thin-gauge body panels and heritage ornaments.
3. Surface Finishing
Using Slurry Blasting or Vapor Systems to achieve a satin, high-end metallurgical finish that is chemically clean and ready for specialized clear-coats.
Surface Finish Comparison
| Method | Abrasive | Visual Result | Metallurgy Impact |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dry Blasting | Garnet | Matte Grey | Moderate Etching |
| Bead Blasting | Glass Bead | Bright Satin | Surface Peening |
| Vapor Blasting | Bead Mix | Original Lustre | Buffered / Low Stress |
| Slurry Blasting | Fine Alox | Surgical Smooth | Ultra-Low Profile |
Aluminum Restoration
Aluminum is soft and reactive. To prevent "pitting," the technical setup must utilize Vapor Abrasive Blasting. The water buffer prevents the abrasive from impregnating the metal pores, ensuring the alloy remains dimensionally accurate for rebuilds.
Heritage Cast Iron
Heavy cast iron restoration (e.g., engine manifolds) requires thorough rust removal without rounding off sharp technical edges. Low-pressure dry blasting with fine Garnet followed by a Glass Bead finish is the industry standard sequence.