Richard Casto wrote:
Apparently blasting with dry ice is the new deal.
I used to sell that system, Alpheus, to the airlines when they were on a tear to reduce weight by removing all unnecessary paint on the fuselage. Sold a system after several expensive trials at Delta in ATL. They decided to use the system for environmental reasons, not cost. Just vacuum up the paint chips. It did a pretty good job of paint removal, but the process is SLOW going. We also sold a couple of units to companies that perform cleaning services on large boilers and Power Gen. fireboxes. It removed the crap inside pretty well, but again was time-consuming (read: EXPENSIVE). It never really caught on, and the sales expense was unacceptable to my company, so we dropped the line.
The system manufactures CO2 "pellets" about 3.0mm in diameter, extruded through a die so they come out looking like little barrels. These are fed down a tube at low pressure, and are injected into a 500-psi air jet at the spray nozzle. When they impact the work surface, they penetrate the paint skin and explode, causing pretty high localized pressures which ablate the surface of the work. Interesting concept, but used LOTS of energy in the form of very large compressors.
If the cost of the system eventually decreased, which it did not when I sold it, it may be at a level where consumer applications are possible. Otherwise it is probably to be found only in specialized industrial areas and may not be accessible to the masses. But, you never know...
Another system extensively used employs ground-up walnut shells. I think there are plenty of places that use it, as it is just considered another blast media. Again, not real agressive, and obviously fairly friendly to the environment.
