The Application and Significance of Sandblasting in Sandblasting Glass and Special-Shaped Glass

Sandblasting involves using compressed air to push abrasive material against the surface of a workpiece. This process is often referred to as sandblasting or sandblasting. Since sand was the only abrasive available in the early days of shot blasting, shot blasting was often referred to as shot blasting.

 

Among various surface pretreatment methods, sandblasting is the most thorough, adaptable, and widely used. This is because it quickly cleans steel surfaces and thoroughly sandblasts glass, which can be identified using four acceptable finish levels.

 

Sandblasting achieves both the necessary cleanliness and a certain degree of surface roughness, improving the adhesion of coatings to the base surface. No matter how good a coating is, it cannot adhere to an untreated workpiece for long. Surface pretreatment cleans the surface and creates the required roughness to lock in the coating.

 

When sandblasted glass surfaces are coated with high-performance industrial coatings, the coating life can be over 3.5 times longer than similar coatings treated with other methods. Another advantage of sandblasting glass (shot blasting) is that the surface roughness can be determined according to requirements in advance and easily achieved during the cleaning process.

 

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