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Blasting |
Stripmasters offers a
variety of blasting techniques to strip coatings such as lacquer, enamel,
polyurethane, powder coatings, epoxies and decals from a variety of surfaces
including steel, fiberglass, aluminum, plastic, brass, copper, composites and
rubber.
We draw on years of
industry experience to select the best method for all applications, including:
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• Automotive
Restoration
• Aircraft and Components
• Marine, Boat, and Ship Restoration/Repair
• Metal Office & Warehouse Furniture
• Engine Compartments
• Wrought & Cast Iron |
• Powder Coat
Removal
• Electric Components
• Die Castings
• Paint Rejects
• Elevator Doors
• Sensitive Fiberglass Parts |
Plastic Media Blasting
Although PMB (Plastic
Media Blasting) is quite similar in principle and process to sandblasting, the
word "blasting" in plastic media blasting is perhaps a bit too harsh for the
process to. In fact, when observing in person, one might get the impression that
the paint is being vacuumed off rather than blasted away, due to the much lower
air pressures. PMB is environmentally safe. After blasting, the plastic beads
and residue dust from the part blasted is reclaimed by the machine and no
chemical agent or solvent is needed to further clean the part.
Industrial &
Commercial Application
Automotive &
Collectibles
CO2 (Dry ice) Blasting
Instead
of using hard abrasive media to grind on a surface, dry ice blasting uses soft
dry ice, accelerated at supersonic speeds, and creates mini-explosions on the
surface to lift the undesirable item off the underlying substrate. This method
is environmentally-friendly and approved for use in the food industry. Plus, dry
ice blasting allows most items to be cleaned in place without time-consuming
disassembly or damaging active electrical or mechanical parts.
read more
Sand Blasting
Sandblasting is a term
for the process of smoothing, shaping and cleaning a hard surface by forcing
solid particles across that surface at high speeds. Sandblasting or abrasive
blasting removes corrosion (rust), coatings (paint), heat treatment
discoloration, weld spatter or other physical defects. |