Build A Homemade Sandblasting Unit


This photo presentation concerns the building of a homemade sandblast cabinet. The apparatus is constructed from an old dishwasher housing, which is just about the right size for a good sandblasting cabinet, and which also has a deep well bottom for holding the abrasive medium/sand. You will probably have to plug the bottom, after all the worx are stripped. You should make it permanent.


The dishwasher housing is mounted on a wood base so that the arms are at a comfortable height above the ground.




The arm holes are cut in the side of the DW housing with a sawzall, or metal cutting jigsaw, and then fitted/lined with 4 inch pvc fittings. The rubber gloves for the inside of the sandblaster are hose clamped to the pvc on the inside. You may be able to salvage gloves with sleeves, and if not, start your search at a safety equipment supply. They should be heavy and entirely rubber coated.




The air is supplied to a spray gun via an air compressor of decent size. The bigger the better, actually. The spray gun has a subsidiary intake which is modified with an extension (flex Pipe/Hose) inserted into the sand reservoir at the bottom of the DW housing, through a hole in the work-surface screen.




As compressed air from the compressor is jetted out of the gun, it draws the sand through the intake embedded in the sand pile at the bottom of the housing, to be jetted out alongwith the compressed air. It has good sandblasting force. Different sands will do different things, too. The sand, and some of the blasted detritus, will both find their way back to the bottom of the the DW housing, so it is a good idea to clean the sand, or change it occasionally. Also, a small diameter screen across the intake will keep the nozzle of the gun from clogging too often. A shopvac hose is inserted in another penetration made at the top of the DW housing, to be used during sandblasting for dust removal.


A light mounted in the housing is a necessity also. It should be across from the viewport, pointing toward where the work will be. The viewport in this cabinet is a piece of plexiglass caulked over a penetration in the DW housing at the edge of the housing just above the arm holes. It is about 4x8Ó on this rig, but I would have liked it bigger.


The unit is of course closed entirely during operation.


A drying filter in the compressed air line will make life a whole lot easier, and can probably even be used, in some instances, to vary air flow.





Below is a closeup drawing of how the sand is picked up and ejected by pressurised air:






Good Luck, and thanks for stopping by autodidactics.com. email me at luxefaire@gmail.com