
Services
Five Methods. One Craft.
Match The Method To The Substrate. Coat Before Flash Rust Starts.
Each method profiles the surface differently. The right call depends on the substrate, the environment, and the coating spec — not on whichever rig pulls up first. Below, the five methods we run, what each is best for, and why it works.
01 / Featured
Sand Blasting
High-pressure abrasive blasting for removing rust, paint, and coatings while creating a proper surface profile for coatings.
Best For
- Structural Steel & Beams
- Heavy Equipment
- Tanks, Silos, And Industrial Surfaces
- Concrete Coating Removal
- Warehouse Ceilings & Interiors
Why It Works
- Aggressive, Efficient Removal
- Creates Ideal Profile For Epoxy/Urethane Systems
- Maximizes Coating Adhesion And Lifespan
02
Dustless Blasting
A combination of water and abrasive media to reduce airborne dust while maintaining effective coating removal.
Best For
- Outdoor Projects Near Buildings Or Traffic
- Automotive Paint Removal
- Projects Requiring Dust Control
- Light-To-Moderate Rust Removal
Why It Works
- Dramatically Reduces Dust
- Safer For Surrounding Property
- Mobile And Efficient For On-Site Work
03
Dry Ice Blasting
Non-abrasive cleaning using CO₂ pellets that evaporate on impact — leaving no residue or secondary waste.
Best For
- Food Processing Facilities
- Electrical Panels & Sensitive Equipment
- Grease And Oil Removal
- Mold And Fire Restoration
- Cleaning Without Disassembly
Why It Works
- No Water, No Grit, No Cleanup Media
- Safe For Delicate Components
- Minimal Downtime For Operations
04
Shot Blasting
High-speed steel shot blasting for aggressive cleaning and surface strengthening, typically in controlled environments.
Best For
- Steel Fabrication
- Production Environments
- Concrete Floor Prep
- Removing Mill Scale And Coatings
Why It Works
- Extremely Consistent Finish
- High Production Efficiency
- Enhances Coating Adhesion And Durability
05
Painting & Coating
Sandblasting alone removes rust, paint, and contaminants — but it also exposes bare, reactive substrate. Without proper coating, that surface will begin to oxidize quickly. A commercial-grade coating applied immediately after blasting seals the surface, prevents corrosion, and creates long-term durability.
Best For
- Structural Steel & Buildings
- Heavy Equipment & Fleet
- Industrial Facilities
- Concrete Surfaces
- Tanks, Silos & Containment
Why It Works
- Mechanical Bonding Via Blast-Cut Anchor Profile
- Rust, Mill Scale, Oil, Old Coatings — Fully Removed
- Even Thickness, Even Cure, Longer Service Life
- Mid-Tier Systems 3–8 Yrs · Premium 8–15+ Yrs

Why It Works
Blasting Prepares The Surface. Coating Protects It.
Skipping proper surface prep is the number-one reason coatings fail. Done right, the substrate and the coating become one system.
01
Mechanical Bonding, Not Just Sticking
Blasting cuts an anchor pattern into the substrate. Coatings lock into the profile rather than sit on top of it.
02
Contaminant Removal, Fully
Rust, mill scale, oil, and old coatings come off completely — eliminating the hidden failure points that cause peeling and breakdown.
03
Uniform Surface, Even Cure
A consistent profile means even coating thickness, better curing, and a longer service life across the whole asset.
04
Service Life, Measured In Years
Mid-tier systems last 3–8 years. Premium systems push 8–15+. Without proper prep, coatings often fail in a fraction of that.
Typical Coating Systems We Work With
Match The System To The Job.
Epoxy Primers
Corrosion resistance, strong adhesion. Pairs with urethane topcoats.
Urethane Topcoats
UV resistance, durability. Outdoor exposure and color retention.
DTM / Acrylic
Cost-effective, single-pass options for lower-spec jobs.
High-Performance Industrial
Carboline, Sherwin-Williams. Spec-driven engineered coating systems.
We can work with your specified system or recommend one based on environment, budget, and desired lifespan.

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