Application Guide

Abrasive Blasting Media for Rust Removal: Best Types & Techniques

A complete application guide to selecting abrasive blasting media for rust and corrosion removal — covering cleanliness grades, surface profile requirements, media selection by corrosion severity, and industry-specific best practices.

Published April 2026 By Jiangsu Henglihong Technology Co., Ltd. ~2,200 words · 10 min read

Why Abrasive Blasting Is the Gold Standard for Rust Removal

Abrasive blasting is the most effective and widely specified method for removing rust, mill scale, and corrosion products from steel surfaces — simultaneously achieving the cleanliness grade and surface profile depth required for long-term protective coating adhesion in a single operation.

Unlike mechanical cleaning methods (wire brushing, needle gun descaling, grinding) or chemical rust conversion treatments, abrasive blasting removes corrosion products completely, activates the steel surface by exposing fresh metal, and creates the micro-roughness that coatings mechanically interlock with. The combination of these three effects in one process is what makes blast cleaning the dominant surface preparation method in structural steel, pipeline, marine, and industrial equipment coating operations worldwide.

The effectiveness of rust removal blasting depends critically on two variables: the cleanliness grade achieved (how much rust and contamination is removed) and the surface profile depth created (how rough the cleaned surface is). Both are driven by the choice of blasting media, grit size, and process parameters. For the complete media selection framework, see: How to Choose Abrasive Blasting Media: 7 Key Factors Explained.

ISO 8501-1 Cleanliness Grades Explained

ISO 8501-1 (and the equivalent Swedish Standard SIS 05 59 00) defines four blast cleanliness grades based on visual assessment of the blasted surface. These grades are universally referenced in coating specifications and procurement contracts for corrosion protection work on steel.

Sa 1

Light Blast Cleaning

Removes loose rust, loose mill scale, and loose paint. Tightly adhering contamination may remain. Minimum acceptable for any coating. Used only for non-critical temporary protection.

Sa 2

Thorough Blast Cleaning

Removes nearly all loose and most tightly adhering rust, scale, and paint. Residual staining less than 33% of any unit area. Suitable for some primer systems in mild environments.

Sa 2.5

Near-White Metal

Removes all visible contamination except for slight staining on no more than 5% of each unit area. The most commonly specified grade for industrial protective coatings worldwide.

Sa 3

White Metal

Completely clean, uniform grey-white steel — no visible rust, scale, paint, or staining anywhere. Required for the highest-performance coating systems in severe environments.

The Industry Standard: Sa 2.5

Sa 2.5 (near-white metal) is specified by the vast majority of industrial protective coating systems — from marine epoxy to pipeline FBE to structural steel primers. Achieving Sa 3 (white metal) typically requires 20–40% more blasting time for marginal improvement in coating adhesion in most applications. Always confirm the required grade from the coating manufacturer’s TDS before specifying media and process parameters.

Media Selection by Corrosion Severity

The severity of existing corrosion on the substrate — from light surface rust to heavy mill scale and pitting — significantly influences which media and grit size will achieve the required cleanliness grade within an acceptable number of blast passes.

Corrosion Level説明Recommended MediaGrit SizeTarget Grade
Light surface rustThin rust film, no pitting, mill scale mostly intactAluminum oxide or GarnetF60–F80 / 36/60 meshSa 2.5
Moderate rustVisible rust, some pitting, partial scale lossSteel Grit GL or Aluminum OxideG-40–G-50 / F36–F60Sa 2.5
Heavy rustDeep rust, significant pitting, heavy scaleSteel Grit GL/GH or Coarse Al₂O₃G-25–G-40 / F24–F36Sa 2.5–Sa 3
Mill scale + rustNew steel with intact mill scale and surface rustSteel Grit GH or Coarse Al₂O₃G-18–G-25 / F16–F36Sa 2.5–Sa 3
Severely pitted steelDeep pitting with rust product embedded in pitsSteel Grit GH (multiple passes)G-14–G-25Sa 2.5 min

Best Media Types for Rust Removal

Steel Grit — The High-Volume Standard

For high-volume structural steel operations — fabrication shops, shipyards, pipe mills, and bridge construction — steel grit in GL or GH hardness grades is the dominant choice. Its combination of aggressive cutting action, exceptional recyclability (200–300 cycles), and very low per-cycle cost makes it economically unbeatable at scale. GL grade (60–63 HRC) provides the best balance of cutting aggressiveness and media longevity for the majority of rust removal applications. GH grade (63–65+ HRC) is reserved for the most tenacious mill scale and deepest pitting.

The primary limitation of steel grit for rust removal: it cannot be used on stainless steel or non-ferrous metals due to iron contamination risk. For carbon steel, it is the first-choice media. Full technical details: Steel Shot & Steel Grit Blasting Media: Angular vs Round for Surface Prep.

Aluminum Oxide — Precision and Versatility

Aluminum oxide is the preferred media for rust removal on precision components, smaller-scale cabinet blasting, and applications requiring a tightly controlled grit size distribution for consistent surface profiles. Its Mohs 9 hardness removes rust and mill scale effectively across a wide range of grit sizes, and white aluminum oxide is safe for stainless steel and non-ferrous metals where iron contamination from steel grit would be unacceptable. For operations consuming less than 50 tonnes of steel per month — below the economic threshold where a steel media reclaim system justifies its capital cost — aluminum oxide with air-wash reclaim often delivers the best total cost of use. Full technical details: Aluminum Oxide Blasting Media: Properties, Grit Sizes & Best Uses.

Garnet — Open-Site and Eco-Sensitive Operations

Garnet is the preferred media for open-site rust removal blasting — field pipeline work, bridge rehabilitation, offshore maintenance — where portable pneumatic equipment is used without full media reclaim, and where dust generation, site contamination, and waste disposal are under environmental scrutiny. Its very low dust generation (30–50% less than aluminum oxide at equivalent pressure), low free silica content (<1%), and non-hazardous waste classification make it the practical choice for blasting in environmentally regulated settings. Full technical details: Garnet Blasting Media: Eco-Friendly Performance for Wet & Dry Blasting.

Silicon Carbide — Rust on Hardened Steel

For rust removal from hardened tool steels (above HRC 55) or hard alloy surfaces where aluminum oxide fails to generate adequate cutting pressure, silicon carbide provides the additional hardness needed. This is a niche application — the vast majority of rust removal work occurs on carbon or mild alloy steel where steel grit or aluminum oxide are fully adequate. Full technical details: Silicon Carbide Blasting Media: Hardness, Applications & Reusability.

Grit Size Selection for Rust Removal

申し込みTarget Profile (Rz µm)Al₂O₃ FEPASteel Grit SAEGarnet US Mesh
Light rust removal only (no coating prep)20–40F60–F80G-50 GP36/60–60/100
Rust removal + standard epoxy primer prep40–60F46–F60G-40–G-50 GL30/60–36/60
Rust + mill scale removal + heavy coating prep60–90F36–F46G-25–G-40 GL/GH20/40
Heavy mill scale + deepest profiling80–130F16–F24G-18–G-25 GH16/20
Zinc-rich primer prep (requires deeper profile)50–100F36–F46G-25–G-40 GL20/40

Surface Profile Requirements Before Coating

Achieving the correct cleanliness grade is necessary but not sufficient for long-term coating performance — the surface profile depth must also fall within the range specified by the coating system. Insufficient profile depth reduces mechanical adhesion; excessive depth can create “holidays” (thin coating areas at profile peaks) that initiate corrosion under the coating.

Coating TypeTypical Cleanliness GradeMinimum Rz (µm)Maximum Rz (µm)Notes
Epoxy primer (standard)Sa 2.54075Most common specification worldwide
Zinc-rich primerSa 2.5–Sa 350100Zinc needs deep profile for mechanical adhesion
High-build epoxy (500 µm+ DFT)Sa 2.560120Thicker coatings tolerate deeper profiles
FBE pipeline coatingSa 2.55090Per ISO 21809 / API 5L requirements
3LPE pipeline coatingSa 2.55085Outer PE layer applied over FBE primer
Marine antifouling systemSa 2.54070IMO PSPC requirements for ballast tanks
Thermal spray (HVOF / plasma)Sa 360120Mechanical bonding requires deep anchor
Powder coatingSa 2.54080Always check TDS — varies by powder system
Always Measure — Never Assume

After blasting for rust removal and prior to coating application, always measure the actual surface profile using either Testex Press-O-Film replica tape (read with a spring micrometer) or a portable contact profilometer. Visual assessment alone cannot reliably confirm that the required profile depth has been achieved. Profile measurement is a contractual requirement on most marine, offshore, and infrastructure coating projects — and a sound quality assurance practice on all others.

Industry-Specific Applications

Structural Steel Fabrication

Fabricated beams, columns, plates, and assemblies are blast-cleaned before shop-primer application using automated wheel blast lines with steel grit. The standard specification is Sa 2.5 with 40–75 µm Rz using G-25 to G-50 steel grit. High throughput (hundreds of tonnes per shift) makes the economics of closed-loop steel media reclaim compelling. For extremely heavy mill scale on hot-rolled sections, GH grade grit or a coarser size (G-18 to G-25) may be required for single-pass Sa 2.5 achievement.

Oil & Gas Pipeline Field Coating

Field-applied corrosion protection on oil and gas pipelines — typically FBE or 3LPE systems — requires Sa 2.5 with 50–90 µm Rz. Portable pneumatic equipment is used at construction sites and in pipeline corridors. Garnet (20/40 to 30/60 mesh) is most commonly specified for this application due to its low dust in often confined or semi-enclosed blasting operations, non-hazardous waste disposal in environmentally sensitive pipeline corridors, and consistent profile within the narrow Rz band that FBE application requires.

Marine Vessel Maintenance and New Build

Rust removal and surface preparation for marine coatings — hull external surfaces, ballast tanks, cargo holds, and structural elements — is governed by IMO MSC/Circ. 1330 (PSPC for ballast tanks) and equivalent specifications, almost universally requiring Sa 2.5 with 40–70 µm Rz. New-build shipyards predominantly use automated roller conveyor wheel blast lines with steel grit for plate and section preparation. Maintenance blasting uses portable equipment with garnet or steel grit, depending on media recovery practicality. For full marine application guidance: Blasting Media for Shipbuilding & Marine Steel Structures.

Bridge and Infrastructure Rehabilitation

Rust removal from existing bridge structures and infrastructure involves working in-situ with containment systems to capture spent media and blast debris. The environmental and safety constraints of this application — proximity to water, traffic, and the public — make low-dust, non-hazardous media essential. Garnet and aluminum oxide are most commonly specified. The presence of existing lead-based paint on older structures requires careful management of all spent media as potentially hazardous waste, regardless of the media type used. Safe media handling: Abrasive Blasting Media Safety: PPE, Ventilation & Dust Control.

Common Mistakes in Rust Removal Blasting

Mistake 1: Blasting Over Contaminated Surfaces

Abrasive blasting cannot effectively remove oil, grease, or chemical contamination — it can drive these into the surface, making subsequent paint adhesion worse, not better. Always degrease and clean steel surfaces before blasting. ISO 8504-1 specifies surface preparation sequence: cleaning before blasting, not the other way round.

Mistake 2: Coating Delay After Blasting

Freshly blasted carbon steel begins to re-rust within hours in humid conditions — sometimes visible as “flash rust” within 2–4 hours at relative humidity above 60%. The maximum acceptable interval between blasting and primer application is defined by the coating manufacturer’s TDS (typically 4–8 hours in normal conditions). Blasting and leaving steel exposed overnight without primer application wastes the blasting work entirely.

Mistake 3: Using Round Media Instead of Angular for Rust Removal

Steel shot and glass beads (spherical media) cannot effectively remove mill scale or heavy rust because they peen rather than cut. Angular media — steel grit, aluminum oxide, or garnet — is always required for rust removal to Sa 2.5 or above. Using shot instead of grit results in a surface that fails cleanliness assessment and produces inadequate profile depth for coating adhesion.

Source Rust Removal Blasting Media from Jiangsu Henglihong Technology

We supply aluminum oxide (F16–F220), silicon carbide, glass beads, and steel shot/grit — the complete range of media for rust removal and coating preparation. All products carry full chemical analysis certificates and compliance documentation. Contact us for volume pricing and grit size recommendations for your specific corrosion removal application.

Request a Quote or Technical Consultation

よくある質問

Steel grit (GL/GH, G-25 to G-50) is best for high-volume structural steel operations. Aluminum oxide (F36–F60) is preferred for smaller-scale precision work or when iron contamination must be avoided. Garnet (20/40 to 36/60 mesh) is the standard for open-site and marine blasting where low dust and non-hazardous waste disposal are priorities. All three achieve Sa 2.5 effectively — the choice is driven by throughput volume, environmental constraints, and total cost of use.
Sa 2.5 is “near-white metal blast cleaning” per ISO 8501-1. It requires removal of all visible oil, grease, dirt, mill scale, rust, and coatings, except for slight staining on no more than 5% of each unit area. Sa 2.5 is the most commonly specified cleanliness grade for heavy-duty protective coatings worldwide — from marine epoxy to pipeline FBE to structural steel primer systems.
Sandblasting with silica sand removes rust but is banned or severely restricted in most countries due to silicosis risk — a fatal lung disease from inhaling crystalline silica dust. Safe, effective alternatives include steel grit, aluminum oxide, garnet, and crushed glass, all of which remove rust as effectively without the health hazards. In most industrial jurisdictions, using silica sand for blasting is now a regulatory violation regardless of the health risk argument.
Most industrial rust-protective coating systems require 40–75 µm Rz at Sa 2.5 cleanliness. Zinc-rich primers require 50–100 µm Rz. High-build epoxies tolerate 60–120 µm Rz. Always check the specific coating system’s TDS for the exact profile requirement — using media that produces an inadequate or excessive profile leads to premature coating failure regardless of surface cleanliness.

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