I have been cleaning up metal parts in preparation to recover my Aeronca.
I glass blasted the painted side of some inspection covers and marveled at their condition. They were a wavy as a potato chip!
Soon I noticed that they were quite flat before I blasted them and the waves appeared afterward.
This may seem odd that it took a while to notice but working in a blast cabinet with dust flying and light being obscured make it more tenuous.
So I then began to blast the unpainted side and sure enough they snapped back into shape.
Pictures are attached.
Apparently the glass peens the surface and adds a compression stress that makes them become wavy until you blast the other side and "equalize" it.
I also think that I noticed that if I blasted the painted perimeter first the waviness was less.
I glass blasted the painted side of some inspection covers and marveled at their condition. They were a wavy as a potato chip!
Soon I noticed that they were quite flat before I blasted them and the waves appeared afterward.
This may seem odd that it took a while to notice but working in a blast cabinet with dust flying and light being obscured make it more tenuous.
So I then began to blast the unpainted side and sure enough they snapped back into shape.
Pictures are attached.
Apparently the glass peens the surface and adds a compression stress that makes them become wavy until you blast the other side and "equalize" it.
I also think that I noticed that if I blasted the painted perimeter first the waviness was less.
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