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Jennifer o.
> 3 dayWorked amazing for the job, I couldn’t be happier.
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Norene Kshlerin
> 3 dayWe took the sand blaster to a toolbox and were ready to in two days.
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Ms. Myah Koss
> 3 daywork amazing once you figure it out!! I had bought regular play sand from home depot and it kept getting jammed up right away. to fix this i got a window screen and filtered the sand to get out all the pebbles and rocks. once you get the fine sand only with no rocks this product works amazing. made easy work of a 16foot MonArk aluminum bass boat with a 3000 psi pressure washer.
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Chris B
> 3 dayAfter reading all the 1 star reviews, I didnt have much faith that this product would work. I had an axle with nearly 30 years of rust on it that I wanted to strip off so I could paint it. My pressure washer is 3600 p.s.i at 2.5 gallons per minute, bellow the optimal P.S.I. and G.P.M., so I wanted to give it as much of a chance for success as I possibly could. This is what I did: 1: I bought play sand from Home Depot and sifted through sieve I made from left over parts I had from a screen I made for storm doors. Home Depot has screen making kits you can buy. Its incredibly important to do this because about 1/5 of the sand did not go through the sieve and wouldve no doubt caused a lot of blockages and a ton of frustration. 2. I used a small and a medium hose clamps to ensure that the suction part of the wand stayed on top so as to not allow any water to seep into the hose. The small clamp was clamped where the two wands connected and the larger clamp was used on the plastic part of my wand. If you do this, dont tighten them too tight. You dont want to restrict the flow. It doesnt take much to hold it on top. 3. I put a top (as best as I could) on top of my sifted sand and placed a box over to keep water from getting my sand wet. If you clamp your hose onto your wand, you will lose about a foot in hose length. So, you will have to move your bucket closer to your project. Also, water splashes EVERYWHERE. You must keep your sand dry. The picture of my partially finished differential was taken after 1 bag of sand was used. I sifted the second bag and then went to Tractor Supply and bought the products shown (Black Diamond Abrasive Products Coal, both fine and medium). I used sand and both coal products until I ran out of daylight. As you can see, I had great results. The sifted play sand, fine coal, and medium coal went through with only 1 clog, from sand, and it stripped the axle down to bare metal. I used 1.5 bags of sand, 3/4 bag of fine coal, 1/2 bag of medium coal. When I used the coal I put the bag inside a garbage bag and put a box over it to keep it dry. I dont usually write reviews, but I never had a product surpass my expectations as this one has. The only potential problem was that I was losing pressure where the 2 wands connect. It could be because of material build up there, Im not sure. I lost daylight before I could troubleshoot it. I hope I can clean it out and it can continue to work the way it has. I feel those who gave this product a poor review, probably did something wrong. Hope this review helps people.
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james
> 3 dayI ordered from Amazon your wet sand blasting pressure washer attachment. I cant get any water flow though it do to the fact there is no hole in the pressure side of the venturi. See picture attached. Sense amazon has no link to contact seller. I gave this review. I just one that works.
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JasonE
> 3 dayI used a bag of black blast media on the steel frame I was blasting. It worked perfectly. I tried some play sand and was instant disaster. Rock got stuck and blew water backwards. Once that happened, game over. So… if you ever want to wet blast use silica sand or black blast or glass beads for delicate work. The steel flash rusts in minutes so you gotta work fast when putting primer on. Overall it was a win, but the using of play sand is BS. Don’t even bother. I’m perfectly satisfied with this attachment, especially for the money. Great value for sure. Just plan to NOT use regular play sand!!
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Ross Avila
Greater than one weekIt is pretty sturdy with brass covering the ceramic end piece, will see how it works. Have used it a few times now... very slow but did the job of getting rust off the ancient window screens for painting
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Brian Fulkerson
> 3 dayIts works ok. Need a slight modification then it works great
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bob
> 3 daySand suction line plugs easily and had to blow it clear several time but for $40 worked good. Worked better than I expected
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broncos denver
> 3 dayThis thing is awesome. Was worried about the price to get my pool wet blasted as we have gone too many years without deep cleaning and have been very lax with chemical balancing. Combine that with very very hard water and I have a very expensive problem on my hands and this year it was finally to stop battling the calcium and algae. So we drained the pool and I ordered this in hopes of saving some money. Well, this thing is everything I could have dreamed of and more. It is so worth the money. Tonight after work I ran to Home Depot and got 400lbs of silica sand and got to work. It’s reusable, once it’s dried out you can load it all back up and use it again. (Side note, I turned my pressure washer down to a low idle to start and worked up the idle a little bit until it was adequately removing the scale and algae and deposits exercising caution not to damage the walls of the fiberglass pool.) I got about an hour into playing with this thing and then it got dark so I snapped a quick picture of the progress so far. The steps to the left and the white area near the steps are sand blasted. The darker area to the right is freshly pressure washed and resembles the condition the steps were in before sand blasting them. 10/10 would recommend to anyone!