I've used muratic acid before but for the most part, for years, I used to have to borrow/rent someone else's bead blaster. A bead blast cabinet is a nice tool to have. However, most of the other people's blast cabinets I've used had compressors that were too small for continuous blasting. --You blast a couple of minutes, wait 5 minutes for the compressor to catch back up, blast, then wait.....
I said that some day I would have a good blast cabinet and a compressor big enough that I wouldn't have to wait on it. That day came in December 2006.
![Image](http://i1093.photobucket.com/albums/i424/ultrastang68/Aircompressor010_zpse5f8040d.jpg)
![Image](http://i1093.photobucket.com/albums/i424/ultrastang68/Aircompressor008_zps90a66373.jpg)
I got this 48" wide bead blast cabinet about 4 months later.
![Image](http://i1093.photobucket.com/albums/i424/ultrastang68/BlastCabinet_zpsbd9849dc.jpg)
I made a modification to the cabinet to be able to attach/detach a 30-gallon drum to the side that would extend the width to over 6 feet. --perfect for blasting rear end housings, drive shafts, etc. --the following picture quality sucks but, you can see the drum attached to the side.
![Image](http://i1093.photobucket.com/albums/i424/ultrastang68/BeadBlastCabinet005_edited_zpse98102b0.jpg)
Interior view of extended cabinet.
![Image](http://i1093.photobucket.com/albums/i424/ultrastang68/BeadBlastCabinet006_zps7b4b4b8c.jpg)
1960 Ford T-Bird 9-inch rear end housing inside cabinet.
![Image](http://i1093.photobucket.com/albums/i424/ultrastang68/BeadBlastCabinet007_zpsdd1c1f8c.jpg)
When I don't need the added length, the drum can be removed and the hole capped off with a drum head.
This is the equipment I've used to blast all the front disc brake suspension parts, power steering brackets, tilt steering column, etc. that I've been installing on my truck the past few weeks.