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Sandblasting Tips: Know Your Nozzles

By on Dec 13th 2019

Know Your Nozzles:

Blast Nozzle Materials

Understand the Advantages and Disadvantages of the Materials Used to Make Blast Nozzles

Cast Iron Nozzles

Rarely used today. They wear out after 6 to 8 hours of blasting.

Ceramic Nozzles

Used with non-aggressive abrasive in light-duty equipment and in blast cabinets.

Aluminum Oxide Nozzles

Cost less than carbide-lined nozzles (discussed below). A good fit for low-use applications or when price is more important than service life.

Carbide Lined Nozzles: Tungsten, Silicon, and Boron

The most popular choice for the majority of blasting applications due to their long life, even though carbide nozzle liners tend to be brittle. To protect against this brittleness, Clemco nozzle liners are encased in a jacket, usually made from metal, urethane, or rubber.

Tungsten-Carbide Lined Nozzles

Hard and heavy, provide excellent wear resistance.

Tungsten carbide is sintered, a process that uses extreme heat and pressure to produce one-piece liners in a mold. While sintering strengthens tungsten carbide, it also contributes to brittleness. Still, tungsten-carbide lined nozzles are an excellent choice to use with steel grit, steel shot, or any iron abrasive because the high density of steel abrasive causes chipping in other carbide liner materials.

Tungsten-carbide lined nozzles also are an excellent choice when mineral or coal slag abrasive is used in applications with rough handling.

Tungsten-carbide lined nozzles last from 300 to 400hours when used with expendable abrasive and are less likely to chip than longer-lasting silicon-carbide lined nozzles.

Silicon-Carbide Lined Nozzles

Developed from research on lightweight and durable materials for the aircraft and aerospace industries. Silicon-carbide lined nozzles weighs 42% less than comparable tungsten-carbide lined nozzles, making them easier to hold for long durations.

With expendable abrasive, silicon carbide lasts between 400 to 600 hours, but it chips more easily than tungsten carbide.

Boron Carbide

The longest-wearing carbide lined nozzles. Boron-carbide lined nozzles are extremely tolerant of sharp abrasives, such as aluminum oxide and silicon carbide, and are best suited for applications that do not require rough handling.

With expendable abrasive, boron-carbide lined nozzles last between 750 and 1500 hours.

The price of a boron-carbide lined nozzle is two to three times more than for a comparable silicon-carbide lined nozzle or tungsten-carbide lined nozzle; however, the cost per operating hour for boron carbide as compared to tungsten and silicon carbide decreases as more aggressive abrasive is used.


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