Buying Guide

Shot Blasting Machine Buying Guide and RFQ Checklist

A buyer-focused guide for specifying shot blasting machines based on workpiece type, production volume, surface finish, utilities, and supplier evidence.

Key FactStart with part data and finish criteria
Design CheckRequire sample blasting for high-risk parts
Buyer NoteAsk for spare parts and maintenance access before comparing price

A buyer-focused guide for specifying shot blasting machines based on workpiece type, production volume, surface finish, utilities, and supplier evidence.

Engineering note: final machine sizing should be confirmed by sample parts, target cleanliness, target profile, abrasive mix, wheel layout, operating hours, and local dust requirements.
Buying Guide

Specify the Workpiece First

A useful RFQ starts with workpiece facts: material, size envelope, weight, geometry, contamination, temperature, sensitivity to impact, and whether the part can retain abrasive. Include drawings and photos from several angles. If the part family varies, define the minimum, average, and maximum cases.

Do not let chamber size become the only specification. The machine must expose the surfaces that matter. Complex castings, weldments, and profiles may need rotation, multiple wheels, special fixtures, blow-off, or post-blast media removal.

Buying Guide

Match Production Volume and Finish

Define production volume as accepted output per hour or shift. For coatings, specify cleanliness and profile. For peening or fatigue improvement, specify coverage, intensity, media, and process controls. For cosmetic finishing, define acceptable color, brightness, and defect limits.

A supplier should be able to state the assumed cycle time, wheel arrangement, abrasive recommendation, dust collector size, connected load, and operator requirement. If the answer is generic, ask for a sample trial.

Buying Guide

RFQ Checklist

A complete RFQ reduces quote ambiguity and prevents later cost surprises. Include site voltage, available compressed air, foundation limits, noise expectations, dust discharge rules, crane or forklift access, and desired automation interfaces.

Ask every supplier for a two-year spare parts list, critical spare lead times, blade change procedure, liner access, dust filter details, warranty terms, installation scope, and commissioning acceptance tests.

RFQ ItemWhat to ProvideWhy It Matters
Part dataDrawings, photos, material, weightDrives handling and chamber design
Finish targetCleanliness, Ra/Rz, coating specDefines blast intensity and media
Production volumeParts/h, tph, shifts/dayDetermines wheel power and automation
Site dataVoltage, air, floor, dust rulesPrevents installation surprises
Commercial scopeSpare parts, training, installMakes quotes comparable