Technical
FAQ Hub

How much CFM is required for an 8mm (#5) blasting nozzle at 100 PSI?

For an 8mm (#5) nozzle operating at 100 PSI, the technical air requirement is approximately 161 CFM. However, your compressor should provide at least 180-200 CFM to account for pressure drops across moisture separators and hose runs. Operating below this level causes pressure drops, inconsistent profiles, and media waste.

What is the difference between Sa 2.5 and Sa 3.0 blasting standards?

Sa 2.5 (Near-White Metal) allows slight streaks or shadows on up to 5% of the surface. Sa 3.0 (White Metal) requires 100% removal of all visible contaminants, resulting in a uniform metallic color. Sa 3.0 is mandatory for high-build chemical tank linings and specialized thermal sprays.

Which abrasive media is better: Garnet or Steel Grit?

It depends on the environment. Garnet is the 'Expendable King' for outdoor shipyard work where recovery is impossible. Steel Grit is the 'Recyclable Beast' for indoor blast rooms, offering 100+ reuse cycles and much lower total cost of ownership in closed loops.

How often should a Tungsten Carbide nozzle be replaced?

A nozzle is technically 'dead' once the bore wears 1.5mm (1/16") beyond its original size. At this point, system pressure drops significantly, and air energy waste exceeds the cost of a new nozzle. Standard TC nozzles typically last 300-500 hours with Garnet.

What causes "Flash Rust" immediately after blasting?

Flash rust occurs when the relative humidity exceeds 85% or the substrate temperature is within 3°C of the dew point. Moisture condenses on the active anchor pattern, causing rapid re-oxidation. This can be mitigated using aftercoolers or chemical inhibitors.

Why is a 'Deadman Valve' mandatory for industrial safety?

The Deadman handle is a fail-safe. If an operator loses control of the nozzle, releasing the handle immediately depressurizes the blast pot, stopping the abrasive flow and preventing catastrophic injury or equipment damage.

Blasting Operations

When should a nozzle be replaced?

Technical replacement is mandatory when the nozzle orifice has worn **1.5mm (1/16")** beyond its original size. For example, a 9.5mm (#6) nozzle must be retired once the bore reaches 11mm. Operating beyond this limit causes a massive drop in pressure because the compressor cannot meet the increased CFM demand. This results in reduced particle velocity and an immediate spike in media waste. Upgrade to Boron Carbide (B4C) for 1000+ hours of service life.

Why is a Deadman handle mandatory?

The Deadman handle is a technical fail-safe. Abrasive only flows when the handle is actively depressed. If the operator drops the hose, the handle release instantly signals the valves to exhaust the pot. Without this, a dropped hose can whip violently, causing catastrophic injury. All BLAST APEX systems utilize pneumatic deadman logic for immediate response, ensuring compliance with OSHA 1910.94 safety regulations.

Compressors & Air

Rotary Screw vs Reciprocating for blasting?

Abrasive blasting is a continuous-duty task requiring 100% airflow stability. Rotary screw compressors, like the APEX series, are designed for 24/7 operation without pressure pulsing. Reciprocating (piston) compressors are only suited for intermittent utility work as they require cool-down periods and produce pulsating air that leads to inconsistent anchor profiles and nozzle pressure drops.

Surface Preparation

Why does the anchor profile (microns) matter?

The anchor profile provides the mechanical "grip" for the coating. If the profile is too shallow, the coating will peel under thermal stress. If too deep, the peaks may protrude through the primer coat, causing pinpoint corrosion. Technical verification with a Profile Gauge ensures the substrate roughness matches the coating manufacturer's exact technical specification (typically 50-75 microns for marine epoxies).

Maintenance

How often should the moisture separator be drained?

In high-humidity coastal environments, the Moisture Separator should be inspected hourly and drained as needed. While many BLAST APEX separators feature automatic float drains, manual verification is critical to prevent water carryover. Even minor moisture ingress causes abrasive to "damp-clump" in the metering valve, leading to nozzle plugging and inconsistent abrasive flow that halts production.

Safety

What constitutes Grade D Breathing Air?

Grade D air is a technical safety standard (CGA G-7.1) required for supplied-air respirators. It mandates specific limits on Oxygen (19.5-23.5%), Carbon Monoxide (<10ppm), Carbon Dioxide (<1000ppm), and hydrocarbons (<5mg/m3). BLAST APEX Breathing Air Filters utilize multi-stage activated carbon and coalescing logic to purify compressor air to these standards, shielding operators from lung damage in hazardous shipyard and refinery environments.