Product Guide · May 2026

Garnet Abrasive Suppliers: GMA Garnet vs Almandine, Mesh Sizes & Bulk Sourcing

Updated: May 2026 ~2,600 words · 10-min read Jiangsu Henglihong Technology Co. Ltd.

Garnet abrasive has become one of the most widely used blast media in oil and gas, marine, and industrial surface preparation — and for good reason. Its combination of moderate hardness, sub-angular particle shape, very low free-silica content, and low dust generation makes it an excellent choice for open-air blasting environments where worker safety and environmental compliance are paramount. For buyers evaluating garnet abrasive suppliers, understanding the difference between garnet types, mesh sizes, and blast-grade vs. waterjet-grade product is the essential starting point.

This article is part of the complete resource hub at Sandblasting Media Suppliers: The Industrial Buyer’s Complete Guide, published by Jiangsu Henglihong Technology Co., Ltd.

Mohs 7–8
Hardness range across
garnet varieties
<1%
Free silica content
(OSHA compliant)
3–6
Typical reuse cycles
in blast cabinet
Faible
Dust generation vs.
slag abrasives

1. What Is Garnet Abrasive?

Garnet is a group of naturally occurring silicate minerals sharing a common crystal structure but varying in chemical composition. The garnet minerals used industrially are predominantly almandine (iron aluminum silicate, Fe₃Al₂(SiO₄)₃) and andradite, with almandine dominating the abrasive market due to its hardness, toughness, and abundance in economically viable deposits.

Unlike synthetic abrasives such as aluminum oxide or silicon carbide, garnet is mined, crushed, screened, and classified — a relatively low-energy process that contributes to its favorable environmental profile. Crucially, industrial garnet contains chemically bound silica within a silicate crystal lattice rather than free crystalline silica (quartz). This distinction is what makes garnet OSHA-compliant as a blasting abrasive: the free silica content of quality garnet blast media is typically well below 1%, often below 0.1%.

2. GMA Garnet vs. Almandine Garnet

The two names most often encountered when sourcing garnet abrasive are GMA garnet (from Barton’s GMA Garnet Group, mining in Western Australia) and almandine garnet (the mineral species mined in India, China, and other locations). Understanding the distinction helps buyers make informed sourcing decisions.

PropertyGMA Garnet (Australian)Indian Almandine Garnet
Mineral typeAlmandineAlmandine
Mining originWestern AustraliaRajasthan, India
Mohs hardness7.5–8.07.0–7.5
Specific gravity4.0–4.13.8–4.0
Free silica<1% (often <0.1%)<1%
Heavy metalsVery lowLow (varies by deposit)
CohérenceVery high (large-scale industrial mining)Good to high (varies by supplier)
CertificationISO 11126-10; widely approved by classification societiesISO 11126 compliant (supplier-dependent)
Price premiumHigher (strong brand specification)Lower
Best forHigh-specification projects, inspection-heavy contractsCost-competitive projects, general industrial use
✅ GMA vs. Almandine: practical guidance For projects governed by strict classification society or owner inspection regimes (offshore oil platforms, naval vessels, LNG terminals), the specification may explicitly call for GMA garnet. For general structural steel and pipeline work where you are selecting the abrasive based on performance and cost, quality almandine garnet from a certified Indian or Chinese supplier delivers equivalent surface preparation results at a lower landed cost.

3. Mesh Size Chart & Profile Depths

Mesh SizeParticle Size Range (µm)Typical Profile DepthPrimary Use
8/122360–1680100–160 µmVery heavy coatings, aggressive profiling
12/201680–85080–120 µmHeavy rust and scale removal
16/361190–50060–90 µmHeavy industrial preparation
20/40850–42550–75 µmGeneral structural steel Sa 2.5
30/60600–25040–65 µmStandard blast-grade; most widely used
36/60500–25035–55 µmPipeline coating preparation, FBE
80 mesh180–21220–35 µmFine profiling, thin-film coatings
120 mesh125 µm nominal10–20 µmWaterjet cutting (fine grade)

The most widely used blast-grade garnet in the market is 30/60 mesh, which strikes the right balance between blasting productivity, Sa 2.5 cleanliness achievement, and the anchor profile depths (40–65 µm) required by most standard epoxy and polyurethane coating systems. For coating specification matching, see our dedicated resource: Surface Profile & Sa Rating Guide: Matching Blast Media to Coating Specs.

4. Blast-Grade vs. Waterjet-Grade Garnet

One of the most important distinctions for buyers is the difference between blast-grade garnet et waterjet-grade garnet. They are the same mineral but processed to very different specifications:

PropertyBlast-Grade GarnetWaterjet-Grade Garnet
Particle sizeCoarser: 30/60, 20/40, 16/36Finer: 80 mesh, 120 mesh, 200 mesh
ShapeSub-angular; some rounded acceptableSub-angular; very consistent shape required
PurityStandardHigher — low chloride, low moisture
Fines contentModerate toleranceVery low — fines clog focusing tubes
Moisture<1% acceptable<0.5% required — pump wear risk
PriceLowerHigher (tighter processing specs)
⚠ Do not substitute blast-grade for waterjet-grade Using blast-grade garnet in a waterjet cutting system will accelerate focusing tube wear, increase pump maintenance, and reduce cut quality. Always specify the correct grade for your application and confirm moisture content with your supplier before each shipment.

5. Key Industrial Applications

Oil & Gas Pipeline Surface Preparation

Garnet 30/60 is the dominant media choice for abrasive blasting of oil and gas pipeline in the field. Its low dust generation reduces respiratory exposure risk for workers in open-air environments, its low free silica content ensures OSHA compliance, and the 40–65 µm profile it delivers is compatible with FBE, 3LPE, and epoxy coating systems specified for pipeline protection. Many pipeline project specifications explicitly list garnet as the approved abrasive.

Offshore & Marine Structures

Offshore platform maintenance blasting — conducted in the open or in semi-enclosed conditions — demands media with low dust to protect workers and minimize contamination of the marine environment. Garnet meets both requirements. Its lack of heavy metals and low free silica make it the lowest environmental-risk option among aggressive abrasives.

Shipbuilding Touch-Up and Field Repair

While centrifugal wheel blast machines running steel grit dominate new-build shipyard production, garnet in pressure blast equipment is widely used for field repairs, block joints, and areas inaccessible to automated blast machines. The absence of iron contamination risk is particularly valued on stainless steel pipe runs and non-ferrous fitting areas.

Waterjet Cutting

Fine-mesh garnet (80 and 120 mesh) is the standard abrasive for waterjet cutting of steel, aluminum, stone, glass, ceramics, and composites. The high-pressure water/abrasive slurry cuts through material without thermal distortion, making it invaluable for precision fabrication and cutting heat-sensitive materials.

Bridge and Infrastructure Maintenance

Bridge maintenance blasting — often conducted under controlled containment systems over waterways — benefits from garnet’s low environmental impact and good recyclability. Several state transportation departments in the US have approved garnet as the preferred abrasive for bridge maintenance projects under environmental containment.

6. Recyclability & Cost Economics

Garnet is moderately recyclable — typically achieving 3–6 cycles in a properly maintained blast room or cabinet with a good separator. Beyond that, particle attrition produces an excess of fines that reduce blasting efficiency. Compared to steel grit (500–2,000 cycles) and aluminum oxide (50–150 cycles), garnet’s recyclability is limited. However, garnet’s lower unit price than aluminum oxide partially offsets this disadvantage.

The key economic advantage of garnet lies in its performance as a once-through field abrasive: it delivers better surface quality, lower dust, and higher worker safety compliance than coal slag or copper slag at a competitive unit cost. For the full lifecycle cost comparison across all media types, see: Reusable vs. Single-Use Blast Media: Cost-Per-Cycle Analysis.

7. Bulk Sourcing & Pricing (May 2026)

The global garnet supply market is dominated by GMA Garnet Group (Australia), Barton International (USA/India), and various Indian and Chinese mining and processing operations. Pricing varies significantly by origin, mesh size, certification level, and order volume. The following ranges reflect FOB pricing as of May 2026:

ProduitMesh SizeOriginFOB Price (USD/MT)Notes
Blast-grade almandine garnet30/60India / China$180–$280Most competitive; ISO compliant
Blast-grade almandine garnet20/40India / China$170–$260Coarser, slightly lower cost
GMA Garnet (Australian)30/60Australia$350–$500Premium brand specification
Waterjet-grade garnet80 meshIndia / China$220–$350Higher processing spec
Waterjet-grade garnet120 meshIndia / China$280–$420Fine grinding, tight PSD

8. Frequently Asked Questions

Is garnet safer than steel grit for open-air blasting?
Garnet and steel grit are both OSHA-compliant and contain less than 1% free silica. Garnet generates less dust than coal slag or copper slag, making it preferable for open-air work where dust containment is limited. Steel grit produces more rebound and ricochet hazard in open environments but is more economical in enclosed blast rooms due to high recyclability. Both require appropriate supplied-air respiratory protection per OSHA 29 CFR 1910.94.
What mesh size of garnet should I use for Sa 2.5 preparation?
For standard Sa 2.5 structural steel preparation with an anchor profile of 40–65 µm — suitable for most epoxy and polyurethane coating systems — garnet 30/60 mesh is the industry-standard choice. If your coating specification requires a deeper profile (70+ µm), step up to 20/40 or 16/36. Always confirm the required profile depth in your coating manufacturer’s data sheet before specifying grit size.
Can I use the same garnet for both blasting and waterjet cutting?
No. Blast-grade garnet (30/60, 20/40) is too coarse for most waterjet cutting applications and may damage waterjet focusing tubes if fines content is not tightly controlled. Waterjet-grade garnet (80–120 mesh) is processed to tighter particle size distribution, lower moisture, and lower fines content specifications that protect high-pressure pump components and cutting heads. Always use the grade specified for your equipment type.

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