I have too much stuff in the garage, so why not one more specialty tool? With a 20% off coupon in hand, I marched down to Harbor Freight and picked up their blast cabinet.
I've been casually shopping for a blast cabinet for a while to clean up the parts that are too intricate for wire wheels and my patience for hand cleaning. Sadly, the used market has been slim pickings - most folks are selling old HF cabinets for full retail, or serious shop equipment for serious shop equipment funds. So... knowing that this cabinet is suboptimal out of the box, I expected to do some upgrades out of the box.
Step 1. Assembly. I mostly followed the instructions, but caulked every joint, and the bolts/nuts from the inside. The supplied foam tape will still leak and make a mess - now's the best time to prevent it. I just used what I had lying around, about 3 tubes worth. Don't skimp. I duct taped my old shop vac up to the vent port - will upgrade to dust separator in the next upgrade phase.
Step 1A. Everything is better on wheels. I grabbed a cheapo furniture dolly to harvest it's casters, screwed em on some scrap plywood and Bob's your uncle.
Step 2. Does this work? Nope. Well, I didn't give it the most fair shake. I had some walnut blast media that's been sitting open in a bucket for 6 months. The siphon tube didn't really siphon, and the little blast media that made it to the gun clogged. None of this was unexpected. I tried a couple methods to increase the siphon effect - but to no avail, so gravity feed conversion here we come.
Step 3. From suck to blow. This step will get broken up into gravity feed, gun air supply, and moisture control.
3A. Gravity feed. You can buy kits on ebay, but I was impatient and found a good solution on youtube. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2xaM0c_5pXg . This setup picks up on the bottom of the hooper, has a media drain cap and a ball valve for tuning the bleed air to help even out the siphoning. I found that just barely cracking open the valve evens out the media flow - it chugs when full closed. The media feed line did require drilling a hole in the side of the cabinet - I just have the hose running thru it for now, but will upgrade to a grommet in the near future. Unfortunately none of the HFs near me have aluminum oxide blast media in stock, but tractor supply had this stuff: TSC Blast Media. It worked well at first, but I think this stuff isn't really intended for use in a blast cabinet. It feels like it's clogging easier now, which has me thinking the media is getting pulverized and needs replacement pretty frequently if used in a cabinet. I'm keeping my eyes open for the al-ox stuff when I'm in HF.
3B. Gun air hose. For some reason, well, for cheapness... HF uses a clear hose and barbs to connect from your shop air to gun. No matter how tightly I screwed those crappy hose clamps, it'd blow off after a couple minutes of use. This just won't do. Luckily, the solution was only $4.
Cheap upgrade to the cheapo air hose
3C. Moisture control. This is an ongoing issue for me, so I definitely don't have a great solution. I have a big 60 gal compressor, plumbed into galvanized steel pipe (maybe it's conduit?) that runs across my garage. When setting it up, I put in drain ports at the bottom of the vertical run, and the horizontal run has couple inch slope over the 10' run. In the 10 years since I set up the garage, I haven't been great about draining the lines, but this project has flipped that on it's head. I'm purging the lines a couple times a day (was blasting when it was really humid this week).
I briefly tried running a tiny desiccant drier at the blast cabinet, but it was way too restrictive so I picked up the combo air drier and filter when I grabbed the gun air hose. This setup works OK.
I can blast for about 30 minutes before I start having moisture issues clogging the gun now. I'll unclog the gun, purge the 4 drain valves and let the compressor refill (to be fair, the big compressor cycles on after 1-2 minutes of blasting). The moisture issues get worse as the compressor gets hotter. I think I'm going to put a secondary desiccant unit at the blast cabinet.
So, where are we now: I can effectively clean parts. Win.