Roderick,
For now I am planning, to make sandblasted glass, prepared glass for glue chipping and sandblasting wooden signs.
The glass pieces will be about 4 feet by 3 feet maximum and the wood will be probably a fraction bigger.
Since i do not want to do buy half the machine and then later regret that I did not took the oversize option, I am thinking about the big cabinet.
It will just fit our shop and therefore will be a good option. Except the bigger the more exspensive.... And since I am still seeing this as my ultra-costly hobby I have to rethink all this well prepared. Maybe someday I will go and sell the signs I make.
Mike,
Air source
Big compressor
100-150 CFM (Cubic Feet per Minute) at 100-175 PSI (Pounds per Square Inch) with a 1/4" nozzle worth $6,000 to $20,000?!
Sounds great, but I can not invest that money out of my personal pocket, I want to go on a city trip now and than also.

So the mid-sized 3 HP, three cylinder, 220v compressor with a 50-80 gallon tank costing $1,000 sounds better.
But what CFM and PSI number do they have? Can I blast with the 1/4" nozzle with this amount of power?
I did one wooden sign at a local glass shop and it took aprox 1 hour!!!! for 3 feet by 3 feet; far too long in my opinion.
Blasting outside is not an option too hazardous for us and our neighbours.
Breathing system is no problem now haha since I have my Darth Vader mask and costume from 3M with carbon filters and everything haha. Remember the Hydrofluoric acid post:lol:
Larry,
I wish I could have a walk-in-booth. Except there is absolutely no space here!!! Square meters of building ground costs about the same as in downtown Tokio! And in the shop we are full!! I already examined in the probability to close the 20 feet high ceiling into two stories so that maybe we can place a cnc router, but that too has to wait with the upcoming recession. It is better to keep your spare money in the pocket than later having a dept at the bank.
So for me the right chouce will be somewhere between a light one just for blasting glass or a medium one wich can blast wood now and then also.
But still do not know excactly what minimum CFM and PSI I should have in blasting relatively comfortable on wood with a 1/4"nozzle...
Thanks already for your input, saw the post yesterday, but I had to recover from a New Years eve of alcohol abuse before I could reply.
Will never though the bottle again!
