Our common sense approach to designing a blast room begins with understanding the size of the items that will be blasted. The blast room should be large enough to accommodate the largest work piece and provide ample room for the blasters to work. Since blast room size is proportional to dust collector airflow capacity (and the cost of the dust collector), the correct sizing of the room is a key factor in cost effective design.
Blast Rooms
The core of any modern abrasive blast system is the blast room. Confining the blasting operation to a controlled, clean environment enables efficient abrasive recycling. Well designed blast rooms consist of an amply lit work area, an abrasive reclaim floor that begins the recycling process, an abrasive transport and separation system that removes trash while returning clean abrasive to the blast tank and a dust collector for keeping the environment clean and contaminant free. Read More
Reclaim Floors
We offer a variety of reclaim floor designs and room configurations. We design blast room facilitys uniquely tailored to meet the economic and production concerns of our customers. Read More.
Dust Collectors
The dust collector is an essential component of an abrasive recycling system. It removes small particles and contaminants from the abrasive media and cleans the air in the room for particle emission pollution compliance. Read more.
Standard Equipment
All Abrasive Blast Systems come equipped with several state-of-the-art standard features. Read More.
Optional Equipment
We offer a variety of optional blast room equipment further enabling flexibility in meeting your blasting requirements. Read more.
Portable Equipment
We offer a self-contained abrasive reclaim system that includes an integral elevator, separator / classifier, dust collector controls and abrasive storage hopper. Rugged tubular steel frame construction enables easy transport to the work location. We also offer custom engineered portable units. Read more.

