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Abrasive Blasting

Silica sand is banned in Australia. The substrate may be more dangerous than the abrasive (lead paint, asbestos coatings, RCS in concrete). Air-supplied respirator + enclosed booth where reasonably practicable.

Quick Take
  • Silica sand is prohibited as an abrasive media (>1% free crystalline silica).
  • Air-supplied respirator AS/NZS 1716 Class CE, mandatory for blasters and pot attendants in any open / unventilated work.
  • Dead-man control on the nozzle — releases pressure if dropped.
  • Substrate sampling before blasting any old surface (lead, asbestos, PCB).
  • Health monitoring mandatory for ongoing silica / lead exposure (Reg 368).

1. Process types

MethodNotes
Dry pneumaticAir propels abrasive; highest dust risk.
WetAbrasive + water near nozzle for dust suppression; chromate/nitrate inhibitors restricted.
CabinetEnclosed; operator at viewing window; usually no RPE if maintained.
Blast room / chamberOperator inside, hood/helmet airline respirator.
VacuumShroud + seal + vacuum debris removal; only effective with seal intact.
Centrifugal wheelInside an enclosure; lowest operator exposure.
EmergingSodium bicarbonate, sponge, dry-ice (CO₂).

2. Prohibited media

MediaStatus
Silica sand (>1% free crystalline silica), incl. beach/river/pool-filter sandBanned in Australia
Arsenic>0.1% prohibited
Beryllium>0.1% prohibited
Cadmium>0.1% prohibited
Lead>0.1% (or operator exposure > WHS limit) prohibited
Antimony, cobalt, nickel, tin>0.1% each prohibited
Chromium>0.5% restricted in dry; chromate/nitrate/nitrite restricted in wet
Radioactive>1 Bq/g prohibited

3. Acceptable abrasives

  • Steel grit / shot, chilled iron grit (recyclable, low shatter).
  • Garnet (verify low silica), aluminium oxide.
  • Crushed glass, glass beads, plastic beads, sodium bicarbonate.
  • Metal slag — verify content with supplier's analysis certificate.
  • Dry ice.

Recycled abrasive must be verified before reuse — toxics (lead) and respirable silica concentrate during recycling.

4. Substrate hazards (often the bigger risk)

SubstrateHazard
Lead paint (>1% by dry weight)Reg 392 lead-process; mandatory health monitoring. Blood-lead thresholds: 5 µg/dL reproductive females, 20 µg/dL others.
Concrete, sandstone, brickRCS dust → silicosis.
Asbestos coatings (textured paint, vinyl tile, fibre-cement, plaster)Sample + NATA analysis before blasting. High-pressure water/air on ACM is prohibited.
PCB-coated surfacesProhibited as wet additive; specific decontamination required.

5. Engineering controls — order

![[abrasive_blasting_img001.jpg|520]] Figure 1 — Cabinet blasting: fully enclosed, operator outside at viewing window. The cleanest workflow for small parts.

![[abrasive_blasting_img002.jpg|520]] Figure 2 — Blast room/chamber: operator inside wearing hood/helmet airline respirator (170 L/min continuous, AS/NZS 1716 Class CE). Mechanical exhaust runs ≥ 5 min after blasting before unmasking.

  1. Eliminate: chemical stripper, heat gun, power tools with dust collection, manual sand.
  2. Isolate: cabinet → blast room → temporary enclosure → vacuum blasting.
  3. Engineer: mechanical exhaust 0.3–0.4 m/s air velocity; recirculation + filtration; cyclones; airwashes.
  4. Admin: exclusion zones (extended downwind), schedule outside normal hours, cease in wind, wet vacuum / HEPA housekeeping.
  5. PPE (always required for blasters): air-supplied hood/helmet AS/NZS 1716 Class CE.

6. Open-air work — exclusion zones

![[abrasive_blasting_img003.jpg|520]] Figure 3 — Exclusion zone for open-air blasting. Buffer extends downwind; signed; barricaded; no unauthorised entry. Size determined by risk assessment + wind.

  • Signage: "Abrasive blasting in progress — authorised only — RPE required".
  • Cease blasting in wind (compromises exclusion zone).
  • Tear-resistant screens (polypropylene; not porous cloth) for temporary enclosures.
  • 2 m vertical extension on enclosure tops.

7. Dead-man control & whip

![[abrasive_blasting_img004.jpg|520]] Figure 4 — Nozzle dead-man control: releases air pressure when the operator's hand is removed. Mandatory; pneumatic for hose < 40 m, electric for > 40 m.

  • Anti-static hose with earth wire.
  • Hose whip-checks at every coupling.
  • Coupling safety locks.
  • Hose straight or coiled when not in use.

8. Air-supplied respirator (mandatory)

  • AS/NZS 1716 Class CE — air-supplied hood/helmet, positive pressure, 170 L/min continuous at the regulator (more if cooling suit).
  • Inner bib, hi-vis cape.
  • AS/NZS 1715 breathing-air quality (dry, oil-free, CO alarm).
  • Individually fitted; disinfected if shared.
  • Headbands, valves, face piece checked before each use.
  • Pot attendant: air-purifying respirator backup during maintenance / shutdown.

9. Noise

  • Nozzle discharge: 112–119 dB(A) typical; peak to 145 dB(C) at "abrasive runs out".
  • Cabinet operators: 90–101 dB(A) — only ~12 min unprotected per 8-h shift to stay under 85 dB(A) Aeq.
  • Sound-absorbent enclosures, mufflers, silencers + HPDs + audiometric testing.
  • See [[managing_noise_and_preventing_hearing_loss]].

10. Health monitoring (Reg 368)

Mandatory for ongoing exposure to silica, lead, asbestos, cadmium, arsenic, chromium, cobalt:

  • Biological monitoring (blood lead, urine chromium etc.).
  • Chest X-ray, spirometry for silica.
  • 30-year record retention (40 for asbestos).
  • Worker informed pre-engagement; medical practitioner supervision.

11. Records & training

  • Air-monitoring results — 30 yrs.
  • Plant inspection logbook — daily operator + competent-person periodic.
  • Health-monitoring reports — confidential, 30 yrs (40 asbestos).
  • Substrate-test results, NATA analysis (where applicable).
  • Training: PPE use/maintenance/storage, hazard recognition, emergency procedures, first aid.

12. Common pitfalls / quick wins

Do

  • Verify abrasive certificate before purchase — written silica % from supplier.
  • Sample old paint and old surfaces before any blasting.
  • Maintain the vacuum-blast seal; train operators not to lift the nozzle off the surface.
  • Run baseline blood-lead before any lead-paint work; periodic during.
  • Run audiometric testing for cabinet operators; noise is often missed.
  • Verify cabinet maintenance (door seals, viewing window, exhaust filter) before "no PPE" assumption.

Don't

  • Use silica sand. Banned, full stop.
  • Skip air monitoring "because we always blast garnet" — different hose, different substrate, different result.
  • Let pot attendants near a depressurised pot without RPE.
  • Recycle abrasive without cleaning verification.
  • Blast asbestos coatings with air or high-pressure water.

13. Cross-references

  • See also: [[welding_processes]], [[spray_painting_and_powder_coating]]
  • RCS detail: [[respirable_crystalline_silica]] (Phase 4, §07)
  • Asbestos: [[manage_and_control_asbestos]] / [[safely_remove_asbestos]] (Phase 4)
  • Noise: [[managing_noise_and_preventing_hearing_loss]]
  • Glossary: [[glossary_and_key_concepts]]

Source: model_code_of_practice_abrasive_blasting.pdf (Safe Work Australia, model Code of Practice, CC-BY-NC 4.0). Edition: August 2021 (carries Jul 2020 GHS Rev 7 amendment; supersedes May 2018). Last verified against SWA: 2026-04-28.