Product category:
Calibration and Testing Services, Consultancy and Learning
News Release from: Airblast | Subject: Blastroom
Edited by the Manufacturingtalk Editorial
Team on 31 May 2007
Welsh gas cylinder refurbisher installs
blast room
Gaspack Services of Pontypridd, UK, commissioned Airblast to design and install a blast room for refurbishing and testing gas cylinders.
A purpose-built blast room has been commissioned at Gaspack Services as part of an investment by the company in facilities for refurbishing and testing cylinders and other containers used to store gases There is a legal requirement for steel cylinders, such as those used to store refrigerant gases, to be pressure tested every 10 years
This article was originally published on Manufacturingtalk on 9 Sep 2005 at 8.00am (UK)
Related stories
Can crusher amortises within six months
Can crusher machine reduces any metal or plastics can to one sixth of its original size, so fewer waste skips are needed to dispose of them, dramatically saving disposal costs.
Blast room prepares cranes for coating
A purpose built blast room and paint spray facility has been installed at a crane hire company to surface key or anchor pattern for accepting accept a polyurethane coating.
Gaspack Services of Pontypridd is a newly-formed company set up to provide this service and to be able to provide the high levels of accreditation required, one of its first investments was for a special blast cleaning facility to clean cylinders inside and out before inspection and as necessary, recoating.
Gaspack's General Manager Ben Wells said: "For safety reasons, the interior of a cylinder needs to be returned to the end user in prime condition.
The interior should be free of corrosion and foreign bodies and as clean as that of a thermos flask, if its integrity is to be maintained".
Further reading
Modular blast room prepares wheels
To meet growing product demands a small Airblast modular blast room has provided a self-contained blast cleaning facility in a tight factory space for preparing tractor wheels
Coordinate metrology services are cost-effective
Providing fast, flexible and cost-effective coordinate metrology services to manufacturing sector customers throughout the UK, a new company carries out work on components up to 2m3.
Car navigation and telematics tested automatically
Today's automobile is already a vast network of interconnected silicon chips, controlling everything from airbags to engines operations. Alfautomazione has systems to test them.
Having invited tenders from all leading manufacturers of blast room installations, the proposal from Airblast was accepted and the facility installed.
"We considered other suppliers but most simply offered us a standard or modified standard product.
Only Airblast made careful note of what we wanted to achieve then quoted a system tailored to our needs" said Ben.
At 7m long x 4m wide x 3.2m high, the blast room allows up to six cylinders to be processed in one cycle.
These are loaded onto a trolley which carries them on rails into the blast room.
The double doors are closed and the operator cleans each cylinder individually.
G70 chilled iron grit and a range of special tools and lances are used for cleaning the internal faces of the cylinders, creating an SA2.1/2 surface which allows any defects to be seen clearly during subsequent inspection and testing.
High-performance abrasive recovery, dust extraction and ventilation systems in the room give good working conditions for operators while minimising abrasive costs.
A key feature of the blast room is the Airflex under floor media recovery system which offers many advantages over conventional screw and trough systems - principally high media recovery efficiency, low energy consumption and virtually silent running.
It consists of three full length 1200mm wide floor corridors, each covered with heavy duty grating.
Each includes a series of scrapers which continually sweep used abrasive on the forward stroke to a transversal corridor.
In Gaspack's case, the central corridor extends two metres outside the front of the room to allow the operators to use a special vacuum lance.
Designed and installed by Airblast, this lance removes all media and debris remaining inside the cylinders - a vital consideration as any media left inside would corrode and jeopardise the integrity of the cylinder.
All used media and debris is transferred by bucket elevator to a separator and cleaning system which returns good material to the blast cleaning machine and sends dust, debris and broken down particles to a dust collector for disposal.
This ensures optimum blasting performance and ensures the consistent surface finish required.
Ben Wells concludes: "We are delighted with the new installation which fits our requirements precisely.
The real benefit is its efficiency, which is allowing us to produce a consistent quality finish on the internals of cylinders at a high throughput.
This is very important to us; we see this installation as key to the success of our business as our order book continues to grow".
Airblast designs, manufactures and provides a comprehensive range of equipment for surface preparation and coating.
These include blastrooms, hand blast cabinets, dust extraction systems, abrasives, paint spray stands and associated equipment.
• Airblast: contact details and other news
• Email this article to a colleague
• Register for the free Manufacturingtalk email newsletter
• Manufacturingtalk Home Page

