Vapour blasting

Rob Farmer

Well-known member
UKGSer Subscriber
Joined
Feb 25, 2002
Messages
15,647
Reaction score
90
Location
Vale of Belvoir
After seeing a friends bike that had been vapour blasted I've gone out and got one. It's a serious piece of equipment and gives a great finish.

I'm not a commercial set up but if anybody is restoring a bike and wants vapour blasting done for a fraction of the big boys drop me a line.

I've got to charge, these things eat bits and consumables at an alarming rate.

If you haven't come across vapour blasting before it's basically a water blast cabinet that fires an abrasive slurry at the piece of work using compressed air. The advantages over normal blasting is the water cushions the abrasive preventing it cutting the material. The surface is peened and washed at the same time giving a lovely sheen to the finish that is far more resistant to marking than normal blasting. Being water based means it's a dustless process.

Here's a few examples

parts.jpg


31 year old Front hub

Hub.jpg


Swinging arm

Swingingarm.jpg


Close up of the swinging arm

Swingingarmcloseup.jpg


Cost wise you would be looking at £15 for the swinging arm. £10 for the hub and around £8 for the gearbox cover.

Bearings need to be removed from parts. painted surfaces need to be stripped first.

I can do crankcases and will wash them out the best I can BUT (A very big BUT) you will have to check and thoroughly wash, blow out the oilways and passages along with everything else inside yourself. I would not take responsibility for any problems with beads in the engine. Heads and barrels no problem though.

Before on the right

P1010545.jpg
 
It's pretty good stuff innit:thumb2

What size cabinet have you got. I'm just about to get mine set up for bead and soda blasting.

What medium are you using,as I might know a man who could help you out with that:beerjug:
 
It's one of these

23198aA.jpg


uses beads and water. I tried soda in the water but ended up spraying froth - cleaned it out nicely though but did feck all cleaning.
 
A mate just had some steps for his vintage show truck done , they used glass beads he said for softer material ?? , come up lovely but cost him a fortune so i'll point him in your direction for the next lot of stuff :thumb2
 
A mate just had some steps for his vintage show truck done , they used glass beads he said for softer material ?? , come up lovely but cost him a fortune so i'll point him in your direction for the next lot of stuff :thumb2

Thanks. But I may struggle to get a truck parts in there. A bike engine is pretty much the biggest I could do so if he has anything bigger I'm scuppered. Big vapour blast units are 10's of thousands of pounds so I can understand why it's expensive. The small ones are dear enough.

Glass beads for softer materials. there's a whole range of blast media available for harder materials but I'm not into that. Just doing bike and car stuff.
 
Thanks. But I may struggle to get a truck parts in there. A bike engine is pretty much the biggest I could do so if he has anything bigger I'm scuppered. Big vapour blast units are 10's of thousands of pounds so I can understand why it's expensive. The small ones are dear enough.

Glass beads for softer materials. there's a whole range of blast media available for harder materials but I'm not into that. Just doing bike and car stuff.

ah thats what he was on about with the glass then , its not big stuff only the little steps what go up into the cab so no bigger than a work boot size he restores vintage bikes aswel and has all that done and takes it up north somewhere :)
 
Rob
if there are any metal liner parts in the cabinet you have to replace let me know:thumb
 
ah thats what he was on about with the glass then , its not big stuff only the little steps what go up into the cab so no bigger than a work boot size he restores vintage bikes aswel and has all that done and takes it up north somewhere :)

Ah! I'd got visions of enormous long foot plates.
 
Will it fit on yer bike for the WeeKend ???:augie
I can see that being used a lot over the duration of the event :D
 
Rob,

I changed jobs at the end of August and now have very little time for doing anything other than work so I've knocked the vapour blasting on the head for the time being.
 
vapour blasting

hi rob,

do you still use your vapour blaster?

steve

if your busy with new job goerge in narborough leicester still does vapour blasting same komet machine as yours also good for ali welding hes on 07742582642
 
It's pretty good stuff innit:thumb2

What size cabinet have you got. I'm just about to get mine set up for bead and soda blasting.

What medium are you using,as I might know a man who could help you out with that:beerjug:
dont use soda in wet blaster and dont use too fine glass bead as it will slump and block the pump any advice ring george 07742582642
 
Rob,

I changed jobs at the end of August and now have very little time for doing anything other than work so I've knocked the vapour blasting on the head for the time being.

Hi rob

If you still have this machine would you be interested in selling

Thanks

Mick
 


Back
Top Bottom