Author Topic: Bead blasting?  (Read 531 times)

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Offline encore4me

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Bead blasting?
« on: June 21, 2006, 12:27:57 PM »
I need some help here! I have a Ruger M77 with a blued brl. I want to have a mate finish can this be done by bead blasting? How about sand blasting? I have access to a good sand blaster and wanted to know if I could do anything with it to get the look I am after. Please don't laugh if this is a crazy question I just dont have any experience with this sort of thing.
 If this is totaly crazy any other suggestions?


Matt

Offline dubber123

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Bead blasting?
« Reply #1 on: June 21, 2006, 02:11:02 PM »
I did my Mod. 700 with regular glass beads in a blast cabinet.  The result was a nice fine matte finish.  Maybe the same media will work through your sand blaster.  Just be very careful to seal off the bore from both ends.  I don't think it would help accuracy at all to accidentally blast the bore!  Good luck with your project.

Offline dubber123

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Bead blasting?
« Reply #2 on: June 21, 2006, 02:16:11 PM »
Sorry I didn't say so in my answer, and I hope it doesn't come off as condescending, but of course you will have to have it reblued after you are done.  I'm just not sure if you might have thought you could just "modify" your blued finish.  I'd hate to have you try this only to find out blasting removes blueing instantly.

Offline gunnut69

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Bead blasting?
« Reply #3 on: June 22, 2006, 06:46:20 PM »
Use the glass beads for a fine matte finish, the sand will give a much courser dull finish. I've even experimented with walnut hull cleaning media. It just barely knocks down the shine. You may note that best results are acheived after poliching the surface a bit. Most especially if we're getting rid of or hiding pits. If the surface is smooth it doesn't need polishing, just bead blasting. You can also achieve a slightly matte(satin) finish as a result of a rust blue process.
gunnut69--
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Offline unclenick

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Different blasts for different finishes
« Reply #4 on: June 23, 2006, 12:31:12 PM »
To my eye, the bead blast gives a rough satin finish.  Rust bluing provides a fine satin, if you start with a smooth or nearly polished surface.  I've never tried rust bluing a matte surface.  It might prove interesting?

Sand will be very rough, as mentioned before.  However, you can get aluminum oxide in all different grades and the fine grades will turn the surface dark gray and give it a fine and very dull surface.  A lot of surface area results from an aluminum oxide blasting job.  I use it on sights to prep them for black oxide to get the most sooty looking black possible.  Sand and aluminum oxide and Biasil and Starblast will remove metal.  Beads remove very little but achieve impact texture and remove old finish well.  

The high surface area from aluminum oxide blasting will allow almost all paint-style finishes to adhere extremely well.  It also serves to allow Parkerizing to be very active and achieve a maximally thick phosphate layer.  In the case of zinc phosphate, this creates the best possible base for any kind of spray-on "shake-and-bake" finish, like GunKote or DuraCoat or the Brownells Bake-on Teflon Moly paint finishes.  Some of these may be closer to what you are trying to achieve than anything else?  Read up on them.  They offer excellent protection.

Nick