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Budget Soda Blaster
- kawsakiman
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if you would like, i will tell you how the chemicals in salt wreak havok on bare metal surfaces
just the humidity in the air will flash rust blasted parts.
someday i will be able to afford my kz habit.
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- nads.com
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- ndfez
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- nads.com
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- ndfez
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Right on my brother in law lives in West FargoWest Fargo
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- 9am53
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- homebrew, and some bbq
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'84 GPz900r
'71 CB350
s289.photobucket.com/albums/ll231/9am53/
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- 650 in Vegas
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79 KZ650 C - The best $200 I have ever spent!
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- unomike
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- Biker for 40 years.
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Own: 1980 Kaw KZ1300,Stage 1 kit,K&N pods
1972 Harley Davidson XHL Sportster, 1972 Suzuki T500, 1974 Hodaka 125 Dirt Squirt, 1980 Honda 250 VTR, 1983 Yamaha 750 seca and a 1974 yamaha GT80 for my son.
Bristol, Tennessee. USA
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- unomike
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- Biker for 40 years.
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So has anyone used this budget soda blaster with the course soda? Just wondering if this setup can be used only with the arm and hammer, or if it can be also used with the proper blasting soda.
Corse soda should be ok to use as long as the soda material won't stop up your blasting gun. As far as removing any dirt, I would first test an inconspicious area of your workpiece to see if it cleans to your satsifaction and doesn't damage any sensitive parts before subjecting it to a complete cleaning just to be sure.
Own: 1980 Kaw KZ1300,Stage 1 kit,K&N pods
1972 Harley Davidson XHL Sportster, 1972 Suzuki T500, 1974 Hodaka 125 Dirt Squirt, 1980 Honda 250 VTR, 1983 Yamaha 750 seca and a 1974 yamaha GT80 for my son.
Bristol, Tennessee. USA
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- KAHruzer
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Yesterday, I recalled I had a cheap air tool from Harbor Frieght called an "Engine Cleaning Gun" which combines the air nozzle with a pick-up hose (supposedly for chemical cleaning agents) to pressure wash an engine.
I adapted it to Soda Blasting by only adding the stick at the hose bottom end, by taping what amounts to a pencil (dowel) around the hose, to stand into a box of Armon-Hammer Baking Soda and blasted away.
Results were impressive.
I'll post some pics later when I take them.
But, this worked really well. Better than I even expected.
Here's a link to the 'Engine Cleaning Gun' I used from Harbor Freight. Only $8 and worth every penny.
www.harborfreight.com/cpi/ctaf/displayitem.taf?Itemnumber=97014
BTW, notice it also has a mix adjuster, so you can adjust the flow of soda. Says it needs 60psi, but I ran it all the way up to 125psi at times.
KZ750-H4 LTD 1983 Project
KZ400-B2 1979
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- riverroad
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- 1980 1000LTD B4
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- KAHruzer
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Wasn't being efficient by any standard, and tried many different things along the way.
The part is the sprocket side cover of my KZ750-H4. Last fall I had a huge ordeal just getting it off. Was rusted onto the shifter shaft and wouldn't budge. Finally got it off and winter had set in. So, not by decision, the thing managed to sit in a rubbermaid dishpan, outside, over the winter. It had filled with water, leaves and general crud and was really quite a mess. I didn't want to even touch it. It was that bad.
So, figured it a good test for the blaster.
Didn't get 'before' pics of the front, but it looked just as bad as the backside. I quit on the backside when I ran low of soda (2lb box) and also realized I wanted to get these snapshots with some of the old 'before' remaining.
The front remains very spotted from water stains, but all the crud is gone. This was a very casual first pass, too. Not sure how much of that might come off with a second, more deliberate, pass.
I figure it's going to take some elbow work to get it to shine again, though.
I remain pleased with the result.
As to how much soda, I had been adjusting the feed throughout and would also have some pickup issues at times due to the flow (had to shake the box as it got lower). It wasn't a full box when I started, 3/4 maybe.
Anyway, it lasted 30-40 minutes as I worked with all that going on. As I said, I tried a lot of adjusting, angles, etc.
I imagine an aparatus could be rigged pretty easily to capture the soda and reuse most of it. Might get into that before next pass.
Well, here's the pics:
KZ750-H4 LTD 1983 Project
KZ400-B2 1979
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