Performance Metrics

Shot Blasting Performance Metrics: Efficiency, Roughness, Media Use, and Wear Rate

How to measure whether a shot blasting machine is producing the right surface at the right cost.

Key FactAccepted output is more useful than nominal cycle time
Design CheckRoughness should be measured, not guessed
Buyer NoteMedia consumption and blade life reveal process health

How to measure whether a shot blasting machine is producing the right surface at the right cost.

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.
Performance Metrics

Blasting Efficiency

Blasting efficiency is the rate of accepted work at the required cleanliness and profile. For plate and profiles, measure square meters per hour or tons per hour. For castings and automotive parts, measure accepted parts per hour, kg per batch, and reblast percentage.

The key word is accepted. A machine that produces parts quickly but requires rework is not efficient. Track first-pass acceptance, wheel amperage, cycle time, abrasive top-up, and downtime together. Those values show whether lost productivity is caused by the wheel, loading, separator, dust system, or part handling.

Performance Metrics

Surface Roughness and Profile

Surface roughness should be tied to the downstream process. Paint and primer systems often require an anchor profile, while precision components may need a controlled finish without excessive cutting. Ra reports average deviation. Rz reports peak-to-valley height and is often more descriptive for coating profile.

Media size, angularity, hardness, wheel intensity, and dwell time affect roughness. A profile that is too low can reduce adhesion. A profile that is too high can consume coating, leave peak exposure, or violate a customer specification.

Performance Metrics

Media Consumption and Wear Rate

Media consumption is commonly measured as kg added per blasted ton or per square meter. A sudden increase can indicate poor separation, excessive fines, abrasive carryout, leaks, or over-aggressive blasting. Tracking media top-up is one of the easiest ways to control operating cost.

Wear rate includes blades, impellers, control cages, liners, curtains, elevator belts, screw flights, rollers, seals, and filters. Record replacement intervals and compare them with production volume. A low purchase price can become expensive if the wear system is weak or access is poor.

MetricUseful UnitWhy It Matters
First-pass acceptancePercentShows actual surface quality
Blasting efficiencym2/h, tph, parts/hDefines production capacity
Media consumptionkg/t or kg/m2Direct consumable cost
Wear ratehours per part setPredicts maintenance spend
Dust pressure dropPa or in. w.g.Signals filter and airflow health