Lets forget about surface appearance and oil shedding for a minute.
There is no faster way to ruin aluminum casting than sandblasting. Besides maybe an idiot with a bastard file or a rotary burr.
Can it be done? I have seen it done successfully, yes.
But there is also a swap meet I attend every year full of aluminum castings that were cleaned up for quick sale via sandblasting, and they are ruined. Sandblasting is aggressive enough to quickly remove aluminum, and depending on what you are using for media it only gets worse.
The major problem is mating surfaces, they take a beating. They may look clean, and new...but they are no longer flat enough to seal like they should
Do whatever gets the cases to look the way you want, but dont wreck them in the process.
Lee
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Amen,, hallelujah and say it on the mountain. Thats it in a nutshell.
I try to refrain, but I sometimes succumb to yelling at people on FeeBay for some of their ads, Last couple months a few that were over the top, including 2 that were charging a premium for allegedly restored bikes that were clearly bodge jobs and the cases, heads, and other alloy castings were all clearly sandblasted or media blasted.
I am into old cars as well,, And several times turned away engine rebuilds where idiots brought me parts that should never been sandblasted, and 2 cases where I sold alloy Datsun cyl heads and they sandblasted the heads and then wanted to return them for a refund. I have no problems upon inspection refunding money, But dont alter a part and then change your mind and expect a refund.
That being said,, I AM that bastard with a carbide burr and rotary file.. I Used to do a lot of casting repairs and have a lot of time hogging out alloy to do so, or return a part to service, And at this point I am building a collection of display and cutaway engines for use at shows & events for our museum I volunteer with. Sometimes they will be on display AT the museum, sometimes at shows up and down the west coast and BC Canada. Triumph, BSA, Norton and Harley.. maybe more if I can manage it. I am using castings that are otherwise pretty far gone or scrap for the cutaways,, might do some that COULD be returned to service but those I wont polish or booger up.
I will say up front that I am a total whore for polishing. I have been roundly criticized for it. Publicly castigated, Ridiculed and Mocked. Several of my Triumph twins are polished cases, heads and covers. Did 2 Norton twins as well (That was time consuming) and one of my Goldstars and soon my Norton 961 prototype. I wont ruin a viable and historically significant resto candidate,, But my Goldie was already modified when I got it, and a BITSA to boot. But I have a buffer and polishing setup and not afraid to use it. (We call it BUFFZILLA as its a beast)