Sandblasting Calculator
Estimate active blast time, abrasive thrown, fresh media required, effective nozzle pressure, and compressor margin from real job inputs.
⚙Job Presets
Load a realistic blasting scenario, then adjust the details for your surface, nozzle, media, reclaim setup, and compressor.
📏Blast Setup Inputs
Sandblasting Estimate
🧱Abrasive, Nozzle, and Surface Comparison
Garnet
Balanced cutting
Good rate, low dust, usually limited reuse in open blasting.
AO
Hard media
Aluminum oxide cuts fast and supports many cabinet reuse cycles.
#4
1/4 in nozzle
Useful middle size for moderate steel work and portable pots.
SP 10
Near-white steel
Cleanliness target often slows production compared with sweep blasting.
Reusable media and cabinets
Glass bead, aluminum oxide, plastic media, and steel grit can reduce fresh media needs when the cabinet separator keeps dust and fines out of the usable abrasive.
Open blasting and one-pass media
Garnet, coal slag, crushed glass, and soda are commonly planned as low-reuse or single-pass media, so surface area and abrasive flow dominate the estimate.
Nozzle pressure and profile
Higher effective pressure usually improves speed and profile, but worn nozzles raise air demand and may outrun the compressor before the operator sees full cleaning speed.
📊Nozzle Air and Abrasive Reference
| Nozzle size | Typical air at 100 psi | Open-blast media flow | Common use |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1/8 in #2 | 20 CFM | 70 lb/hr | Small cabinet, detail work |
| 3/16 in #3 | 45 CFM | 150 lb/hr | Cabinet, small spot repair |
| 1/4 in #4 | 81 CFM | 300 lb/hr | Portable pot, general steel |
| 5/16 in #5 | 137 CFM | 475 lb/hr | Frames, equipment, tanks |
| 3/8 in #6 | 196 CFM | 650 lb/hr | Structural steel, large work |
| 7/16 in #7 | 254 CFM | 825 lb/hr | High production field blasting |
| 1/2 in #8 | 338 CFM | 1050 lb/hr | Large compressors, heavy removal |
| 9/16 in #9 | 420 CFM | 1260 lb/hr | Special high-volume blasting |
Air values are planning values for a clean nozzle near 100 psi. Worn nozzles, wet media, long hoses, and restrictive fittings can change the result.
🔬Abrasive Reference Table
| Abrasive | Relative cut | Reuse planning | Typical profile range |
|---|---|---|---|
| Garnet 30/60 | 1.00 balanced | Low to moderate | 1.5 to 3.5 mils |
| Coal slag | 1.08 aggressive | Low | 2.0 to 4.0 mils |
| Crushed glass | 0.88 moderate | Low | 1.0 to 3.0 mils |
| Glass bead | 0.58 gentle | High in cabinet | 0.5 to 1.5 mils |
| Aluminum oxide | 1.18 fast cutting | High in cabinet | 1.5 to 4.0 mils |
| Steel grit | 1.28 very fast | High with reclaim | 2.0 to 5.0 mils |
| Plastic media | 0.45 coating only | Moderate to high | 0.2 to 0.8 mils |
| Sodium bicarbonate | 0.40 soft cleaning | Very low | Minimal profile |
🏗Surface Condition Reference
| Surface condition | Rate factor | Media demand | Planning note |
|---|---|---|---|
| Light paint or oxide | 1.18 faster | 0.88x | Sweep blasting and light cleanup |
| Mill scale, new steel | 0.92 base | 1.00x | Often needs consistent pressure |
| Heavy rust and scale | 0.70 slower | 1.18x | Rust pockets reduce coverage speed |
| Thick coating removal | 0.58 slower | 1.32x | Coating thickness drives dwell time |
| Concrete texture | 0.78 slower | 1.10x | Irregular surfaces raise media use |
| Delicate substrate | 0.50 slower | 0.72x | Lower pressure protects base material |
🔧Production Planning Table
| Job type | Typical nozzle | Pressure band | Coverage band |
|---|---|---|---|
| Small cabinet cleaning | 1/8 to 3/16 in | 45 to 75 psi | 8 to 35 sq ft/hr |
| Automotive stripping | 3/16 to 1/4 in | 45 to 75 psi | 20 to 75 sq ft/hr |
| General steel prep | 1/4 to 5/16 in | 80 to 105 psi | 55 to 150 sq ft/hr |
| Heavy coating removal | 5/16 to 3/8 in | 90 to 115 psi | 35 to 120 sq ft/hr |
| Concrete profiling | 1/4 to 3/8 in | 70 to 105 psi | 45 to 160 sq ft/hr |
| Reusable steel grit room | 3/8 to 1/2 in | 90 to 110 psi | 120 to 280 sq ft/hr |
💡Practical Calculation Notes
Sandblasting job often fail due to a lack of planning for the quantities of abrasive media that will be needed for the job, the length of time that the nozzle will be active, and an air supply that will be required for the job. Although the media used for sandblasting is not usually of poor quality, and although the compressor that the operator will use for sandblasting is not usually too small for the job, sandblasting jobs often fail due to the fact that the operator dont know in advance how much abrasive media will hit the blasting surface, and for how long the nozzle will be active. If the operator dont know how much abrasive media will hit the blasting surface, its possible that the operator will run out of abrasive media for the job.
If the operator does not know how long the nozzle will be active, it is possible that the operator will fail to complete the sandblasting job in a timely manner. Thus, the lack of knowledge of these variables can lead to failed sandblasting jobs. The physics of sandblasting is based upon a few specific inputs for the sandblasting job.
How to Plan a Sandblasting Job
For instance, the size of the nozzle will determine the amount of air and abrasive media that will exit the nozzle. The effective pressure at the nozzle will affect the speed at which the sandblasting media can remove material from the surface being treated, though the effective pressure at the nozzle is typically less than the pressure provided from the compressor. The conditions of the surface to be treated will impact the speed at which the sandblasting media can be moved across the area to be treated; rough and rusted areas will impact the speed in comparison to a relatively even treated area.
The type of media to be used and the number of times that it will be reused will determine the amount of new media that will need to be purchased before the sandblasting begins. Each of these variables must be calculated prior to beginning the sandblasting job. If any of these variables change, the estimate for the sandblasting job will change as well.
The sandblasting calculator allow the operator to input each of the variables that relate to the sandblasting job. Thus, it eliminates the need for the operator to use separate charts to determine the requirements for jobs of different nozzle sizes, or for jobs that utilize different types of abrasive media. Furthermore, the calculator will tell the operator whether or not the sandblasting job is feasible based off the equipment available to the operator.
For instance, the calculator can determine the amount of time that the nozzle will be active during the job, the amount of fresh abrasive media that will be needed, whether or not the compressor will be able to handle the job, and whether or not the compressor will struggle during completion of the sandblasting job. For instance, if the calculator reveals that the sandblasting job will require a low margin for the compressor, it will indicate that the compressor will not be able to provide enough air pressure to complete the job without struggle. The size of the nozzle that will be used and the type of media that will be used are related to one another.
For instance, larger nozzles will allow for more media to be dispensed from the nozzle, and it will take less time for the large nozzle to complete the same job as a smaller nozzle. However, larger nozzles will require more air to function, and if the compressor does not provide the amount of air that is required by the large nozzle, the pressure will drop. Thus, using a large nozzle may not provide the speed advantage for the operator if the compressor is too small for the job.
Additionally, media will become contaminated after being used for sandblasting jobs. Thus, media that is reclamation systems will remain in the nozzle, and will be less likely to become contaminated. Thus, the reclamation system will allow for the media to be used more times before being replaced with new media.
Many sandblasting jobs include factors beyond those that can be easily measured or expressed as numbers. For instance, the time required for masking the area does not necessarily have a correlation with the active time of the sandblasting nozzle. Additionally, the length of the hoses that are used for sandblasting jobs will result in a loss of pressure to the blasting media.
Furthermore, the evenness of the surface to be treated will impact the time that the nozzle needs to remain in a specific area. These factors are important to the success of the sandblasting job, and will impact the amount of time that the sandblasting media will spend on the surface to be treated. It is best to measure only the area of the surface that will be treated.
However, it is also important to incorporate some allowance for time to perform masking of the treated area. Additionally, the sandblasting calculator can be used to test different time allowances to determine the total length of the sandblasting job. For instance, altering the efficiency factor will change the total length of the sandblasting job.
If the efficiency factor is changed from 15% to 25%, the length of the sandblasting job will be increased. Thus, the efficiency factor can be used to calculate how long the sandblasting job will take with a certain percentage of inefficiencies. Running the numbers prior to beginning a sandblasting job allows the operator to think about each variable related to the sandblasting job.
For instance, if the requirements of the surface to be treated, the equipment that will be utilized, and the media budget for the job are all in alignment, then the sandblasting job will proceed at the expected rate. However, if any of those factors are not in alignment with the capabilities of the sandblasting team, the sandblasting calculator will reveal such inconsistencies prior to starting the compressor that will provide the air necessary for the sandblasting process.
