Abrasive Media Grit & Mesh Size Chart: Complete Reference Guide

Specifying abrasive media grit size sounds simple until you realize that the same number — “80 grit,” for example — means a different particle size depending on whether the supplier is using FEPA, ANSI, JIS, or mesh standards. A procurement engineer ordering aluminum oxide “80 grit” without specifying the applicable standard may receive a product with a mean particle diameter 20–30% different from what the process specification requires. For industrial blasting, lapping, sandcarving, and lapidary applications where the grit size directly determines the surface profile or finish quality achieved, this discrepancy is not a minor inconvenience — it is a root cause of surface preparation failures, profile non-conformances, and rejected blasting inspection results.

This complete reference guide explains the major grit sizing standards in use globally, provides cross-reference tables between standards, and includes media-specific size charts for each principal abrasive family. For the full abrasive media purchasing context, see the Abrasive Media Supplies Buyer’s Guide.

Major Grit Sizing Standards

Four primary standards govern abrasive grit size classification in industrial and precision applications:

  • FEPA (Federation of European Producers of Abrasives) — the dominant standard in Europe and most international industrial applications. The F-series (loose grain for blasting and lapping) and P-series (coated abrasive products) use the same number system but define different particle size windows. FEPA F 80 ≠ FEPA P 80.
  • ANSI B74.12 — the US standard for bonded and coated abrasive grain, maintained by the American National Standards Institute. Numbers broadly correspond to FEPA at coarser sizes but diverge significantly at finer grits.
  • JIS R6001 — the Japanese Industrial Standard for abrasive grain sizing. Used for alumina and SiC products manufactured or specified in Japan, Taiwan, and South Korea. Follows FEPA closely at most sizes but with slightly different sieve window definitions.
  • US Mesh (Tyler and US Standard) — wire sieve mesh number = number of wires per inch. Used for natural minerals (garnet, copper slag) and for coarser grain sizes where FEPA numbers are not applied. Higher mesh number = smaller particle. Not the same as grit number.

Always specify the standard when ordering: When issuing a purchase order for abrasive media, always state the applicable standard — “80 grit FEPA F”, “80 mesh US Standard”, or “SAE J827 S-230”. Never rely on grit number alone.

FEPA vs ANSI Cross-Reference Table

FEPA F GradeANSI GritMean Particle Size (µm)Approx. US Mesh
F 1212~1,700 µm12
F 1616~1,200 µm14
F 2020~850 µm18
F 2424~710 µm20
F 3030~590 µm25
F 3636~500 µm30
F 4640~370 µm40
F 5446~310 µm45
F 6054~265 µm50
F 7060~225 µm60
F 8070~190 µm70
F 9080~154 µm80
F 10090~129 µm100
F 120100~109 µm120
F 150120~82 µm150
F 180150~69 µm180
F 220180~58 µm220
F 240220~44 µm270
F 280240~36 µm325
F 320280~29 µm400
Note: Mean particle sizes are nominal midpoints; actual distributions vary by material and manufacturer. FEPA and ANSI numbers diverge progressively at finer grits — never assume equivalence without checking this table.

Mineral & Synthetic Abrasives: Full Size Chart

The following chart covers aluminum oxide and silicon carbide — the two main synthetic abrasives available from Jiangsu Henglihong Technology Co., Ltd. — across the commercially significant FEPA F-series range, with approximate achievable surface profile (Rz) on carbon steel under moderate blast conditions (80 psi, #6 nozzle). For full Al₂O₃ details: Aluminum Oxide Abrasive Media Guide. For SiC details: Silicon Carbide Abrasive Media Guide.

FEPA F GritMean Size (µm)Al₂O₃ Profile Rz (steel)SiC Profile Rz (steel)Primary Use Category
F 16–F 20850–1,200 µm80–120 µm90–130 µmAggressive profiling, heavy scale removal
F 24–F 30590–710 µm65–90 µm70–100 µmHeavy industrial coating prep, Sa 3
F 36–F 46370–500 µm45–70 µm50–80 µmStandard industrial blast, Sa 2.5
F 60–F 80190–265 µm25–45 µm30–50 µmSandcarving, general purpose, thin coatings
F 100–F 120109–154 µm15–28 µm18–32 µmPrecision surface prep, aluminum, stainless
F 150–F 22058–82 µm8–15 µm10–18 µmPre-lapping, thermal spray prep, fine finishing
F 240–F 32029–44 µm4–8 µm5–10 µmLapping, optics, semiconductor prep

Metallic Blast Media: SAE Shot and Grit Standards

SAE Designation类型Mean Diameter (mm)Hardness (HRC)StandardTypical Profile Rz
S-70Shot0.18 mm40–51SAE J82715–25 µm
S-110Shot0.30 mm40–51SAE J82720–35 µm
S-170Shot0.43 mm40–51SAE J82725–40 µm
S-230Shot0.60 mm40–51SAE J82730–50 µm
S-330Shot0.85 mm40–51SAE J82735–55 µm
S-460Shot1.18 mm40–51SAE J82740–65 µm
S-550Shot1.40 mm40–51SAE J82745–70 µm
S-780Shot2.00 mm40–51SAE J82755–85 µm
GL 120Grit0.18 mm54–65SAE J199320–35 µm
GL 80Grit0.30 mm54–65SAE J199330–50 µm
GL 40Grit0.60 mm54–65SAE J199350–80 µm
GL 25Grit0.85 mm54–65SAE J199365–100 µm
GL 16Grit1.40 mm54–65SAE J199380–130 µm

Natural Abrasives: Mesh Size Reference

MediaUS Mesh DesignationParticle Size RangeTypical Profile RzApplication
石榴石#12 / #20850–1,700 µm80–120 µmHeavy scale / thick coating removal
石榴石#20 / #40420–850 µm55–90 µmIndustrial surface prep, Sa 2.5–Sa 3
石榴石#30 / #60250–600 µm40–70 µmPipeline, marine, infrastructure (most common)
石榴石#80150–210 µm25–45 µmThin-film coating systems, aluminum structures
Copper SlagCoarse (12–30)600–1,700 µm65–100 µmShipyard, tank farm, heavy industrial
Copper SlagMedium (20–50)300–850 µm45–75 µmGeneral industrial blasting
Walnut Shell6/101,680–3,360 µmSurface cleaning onlyTurbine blades, large delicate castings
Walnut Shell12/20840–1,680 µmSurface cleaning onlyDelicate alloys, antique metal parts
Walnut Shell20/40420–840 µmSurface cleaning onlyFine cleaning, food equipment

Grit Size vs Surface Profile (Rz) Reference

The relationship between abrasive grit size and achievable surface profile on carbon steel (approximately 200 HV hardness) under standard blast conditions (80 psi, #6 nozzle, 200 mm stand-off distance) can be summarized as follows for practical guidance:

Target Profile Range (Rz)Garnet RecommendationAl₂O₃ RecommendationSteel Grit Recommendation
25–45 µm#80 meshF 80–F 100GL 80
40–65 µm#30/60 meshF 46–F 60GL 40
55–80 µm#20/40 meshF 30–F 36GL 25
75–110 µm#12/20 meshF 16–F 24GL 16

These are working approximations. Actual profile achieved varies with blast pressure, nozzle wear, substrate hardness, and media breakdown state. Always measure achieved profile on a test panel under your specific equipment conditions before committing to a production blast specification.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why does the same FEPA grit number cut differently on different materials?

The FEPA grit number defines the particle size — the physical dimensions of the abrasive grain — not the cutting energy or profile depth it will produce. The actual cutting outcome depends on both particle size and the hardness differential between the abrasive and the substrate. The same F 80 aluminum oxide grain that produces Rz 25–40 µm on mild carbon steel (200 HV) will produce a shallower profile on hardened tool steel (600+ HV) and a deeper profile on soft aluminum alloy (60–80 HV), because the substrate’s resistance to plastic deformation is what determines how deeply each particle penetrates on impact. Always specify and verify profiles on the actual substrate material under the production blast conditions.

Is FEPA F 80 the same as FEPA P 80?

No. FEPA uses two parallel numbering series for the same grit number range. The F-series (Federation grain) defines particle size distribution for loose abrasive grain used in blasting, lapping, and bonded abrasives manufacturing. The P-series (Precision grain) defines particle size distribution for grain used in coated abrasive products (sandpaper, abrasive belts). At the same number — for example, F 80 vs P 80 — the P-series grain is actually finer than the F-series grain. P 80 has a maximum particle size approximately equivalent to F 100. Never use F-series specifications to order P-series product or vice versa.

Abrasive Media in Any Grit Size from Henglihong

Al₂O₃ and SiC in F 12 through F 320, garnet in #12 through #120 mesh, steel shot and grit in the full SAE range. All with COA confirming particle size distribution to standard. Factory-direct pricing.

Get a Free Quote
总浏览量 57