Holding the hose like that is a good way to get a few broken fingers and possibly your wrists. I recommend to stand over the hose and tuck in between your thighs to helps with support. Allow the hose to comfortably sit in either arm pit, and allow a “goose neck” from your armpit to where you are holding the hose at the nozzle. Your off hand can help to support the hose on your chest. This will allow you to blast at practically any angle with simple movement.
A good way to understand this is to make a fist with either hand, and bring it to that same shoulder. Now with the other hand, make a fist and bring it below the opposite armpit. Now with your hands, assume you were holding the blast hose in this position. Your top hand holding the hose, and the bottom hand the support. Hope this helps with safety and production.
Hi Og Pirx, thanks for sharing with us! What's not being said in this video is that we use what we call a "whip" hose at the last 25' end near the nozzle. The whip hose is very thin compared to a normal blast hose. It must be changed more frequently, but it is a lot lighter and easier to handle.
I agree I never held it over my shoulder and yeah setup before you suit up can’t be like that when your in the air and also move that nozzle burning it off your losing time and money js
that is not a good practice set all hoses, pull it to the area you are working.not when you are wearing blaating hood.its to difficult to pull when you wear the hood
Why the hell are you wrestling with the hoses so much? Set up before you gear up.. also run your fresh air hose with the blast hose... you're making this way harder than it needs to be, also you're pressure isn't set right metering valve its causing turbulent pulse.
These are very good advices Chad! You pointed out a few errors to avoid when doing sandblast. This video was intended as a general presentation of outdoor sandblasting. It was not intended to train sandblasters. We hope to release a more complete training video with best practices soon. Stay tuned.
Holding the hose like that is a good way to get a few broken fingers and possibly your wrists. I recommend to stand over the hose and tuck in between your thighs to helps with support. Allow the hose to comfortably sit in either arm pit, and allow a “goose neck” from your armpit to where you are holding the hose at the nozzle. Your off hand can help to support the hose on your chest. This will allow you to blast at practically any angle with simple movement.
A good way to understand this is to make a fist with either hand, and bring it to that same shoulder. Now with the other hand, make a fist and bring it below the opposite armpit. Now with your hands, assume you were holding the blast hose in this position. Your top hand holding the hose, and the bottom hand the support. Hope this helps with safety and production.
Hi Og Pirx, thanks for sharing with us! What's not being said in this video is that we use what we call a "whip" hose at the last 25' end near the nozzle. The whip hose is very thin compared to a normal blast hose. It must be changed more frequently, but it is a lot lighter and easier to handle.
Never put a blast like between your legs. Blow a hose you’ll know
Kaha hi ji sandblasting hamko kam chaheya
I agree I never held it over my shoulder and yeah setup before you suit up can’t be like that when your in the air and also move that nozzle burning it off your losing time and money js
je suis un jeune camerounais j'ai me le sablage je peux faire pour avoir votre adresse
Bonjour Janvier, SVP faites-moi parvenir un courriel @ pmartineau@istsurface.com
They haven't a bloody clue!
that is not a good practice
set all hoses, pull it to the area you are working.not when you are wearing blaating hood.its to difficult to pull when you wear the hood
Why the hell are you wrestling with the hoses so much? Set up before you gear up.. also run your fresh air hose with the blast hose... you're making this way harder than it needs to be, also you're pressure isn't set right metering valve its causing turbulent pulse.
These are very good advices Chad! You pointed out a few errors to avoid when doing sandblast. This video was intended as a general presentation of outdoor sandblasting. It was not intended to train sandblasters. We hope to release a more complete training video with best practices soon. Stay tuned.
18m 40usd
Hi
duh amateurs