Titan Abrasive Systems Designs Upgraded Blast Room for Metal Fabricator
Fab-Tek of Central Mississippi will use the blast room to clean and polish the stainless-steel metal conveyor systems the company designs.
Titan Abrasive Systems (Ivyland, Pennsylvania), a manufacturer of quality surface preparation, surface finishing and sandblasting equipment, has announced the purchase of a new, upgraded blast room by Fab-Tek of Central Mississippi (Copiah County, Mississippi), a leader in metal fabrication and machining.
The blast room will be used primarily to clean and polish the stainless-steel metal conveyor systems the company designs, as well as manufacture for its food processing clients, such as Sanderson Farms and Koch Foods.
To create its high-quality conveyor systems, Fab-Tek purchases flat sheets of stainless steel in large quantities. After running it through the laser cutting, press break, welding and other manufacturing processes, workers use abrasive blasting equipment to produce a smooth, matte finish on the material.
The new blast room measures 15' (W) × 12' (H) × 30' (L). It includes a mechanical recovery system with cross screw (auger); two 6-cubic-foot blast machines; a 12,000 CFM cartridge dust collector; and photohelic pressure switch/gage kit.
The new system replaces an older Titan blast room purchased in 2013. The new room is far bigger and provides much more capacity than the older equipment, which measured 14' (W) × 9' (H) × 22' (L). Plus, the dust collector is twice as powerful, and the cross screw provides a more efficient and less labor-intensive media recovery system, among other upgrades.
Fab-Tek was primarily using glass beads in its blasting operation and will continue to utilize this medium with the newer equipment, given its excellent performance and the fact that it is highly reclaimable.
According to Shannon Moore, president of Fab-Tek, the Titan blast room helps Fab-Tek deliver conveyor systems that are not only well-made but are aesthetically pleasing as well. “It really doesn’t matter that it’s a conveyor system going into a food processing plant,” he notes. “The customers still want it to look good and be proud of it, and so do we.”