Structural
Steel Guide

Technical workflow for steel fabrication blasting, profile consistency, and high-throughput production logic.

Fabrication Blasting Workflow

In heavy steel fabrication, surface preparation is the bottleneck between the welding shop and the paint hall. To maintain project schedules for bridges, stadiums, and high-rise structures, the technical approach focuses on maximum media recycling and Sa 2.5 consistency.

1. Mill Scale Removal

Blast-cleaning raw plates and I-beams to Sa 2.5 to remove the brittle mill scale layer, ensuring the mechanical bond for long-term corrosion protection.

2. Weld Edge Preparation

Focused cleaning of fabricated assembly weld seams to remove slag, spatter, and technical oxidation before multi-layer coating application.

3. Profile Consistency Check

Using Surface Profile Gauges to ensure the anchor pattern matches the primer's requirements (typically 50-75 microns for standard epoxies).

Steel Grit Economics

For repetitive indoor fabrication, Steel Grit is the superior technical choice. Capable of 200+ recycle cycles in an Automatic Blast Room, it provides the lowest cost-per-ton and creates the aggressive anchor profile needed for heavy structural primers.

The Flash Rust Window

Structural steel is highly reactive. Primer must be applied within the "technical window" (usually 4-6 hours) after blasting. High-capacity Cartridge Dust Collectors ensure the blast room environment remains clean, extending the window before moisture-induced flash rust occurs.

Fabrication Throughput Audit

  • Automated Recovery: Floor scraper systems for zero-downtime media turnover.
  • Cyclone Cleaning: Integrated separators to remove oversized debris and dust.
  • High-Build Coating: Utilizing Airless Painting Pumps for rapid fabricated assembly protection.