Browse ISO standards covering abrasive materials, testing procedures, surface preparation requirements, and quality control systems. Authoritative interpretations for engineers, inspectors, and QA specialists.
Comprehensive coverage of ISO 11124, 11125, 11126, 11127, 8501, 8502, 8503, and 8504 series with full specification tables, acceptance criteria, and engineering guidance.
Specifies requirements for metallic abrasives used in blast-cleaning of steel substrates, including chilled iron grit, high-carbon cast steel shot/grit, low-carbon cast steel shot, and cut wire shot.
View Full Specification →Defines test methods for metallic abrasives including sampling, particle size analysis, hardness testing, density measurement, and surface contamination assessment.
View Full Specification →Covers specifications for non-metallic abrasives including silica sand, copper slag, coal furnace slag, nickel slag, iron furnace slag, olivine sand, staurolite, and garnet sand.
View Full Specification →Specifies test methods for non-metallic abrasives including sampling procedures, particle size distribution, moisture content, water-soluble chloride content, and conductivity.
View Full Specification →Defines rust grades (A, B, C, D) and blast-cleaning grades (Sa 1, Sa 2, Sa 2½, Sa 3) through photographic reference standards for visual assessment of steel surface cleanliness.
View Full Specification →Provides test methods for assessing surface contamination including soluble salt content, chloride measurement, oil/grease detection, and dust assessment on prepared steel substrates.
View Full Specification →Specifies comparators and methods for assessing surface profile (roughness) of blast-cleaned steel, covering comparator grading, replica tape methods, and profilometry requirements.
View Full Specification →Defines surface preparation methods including abrasive blast-cleaning, hand and power tool cleaning, and flame cleaning, with guidance on method selection and quality requirements.
View Full Specification →Detailed specification tables for chilled iron grit, cast steel shot/grit, low-carbon cast steel shot, and cut wire shot per ISO 11124 Parts 1–4.
Angular grit manufactured from chilled iron by crushing chilled iron shot. High hardness for aggressive surface profile generation.
| Parameter | G10 (Fine) | G18 (Medium) | G25 (Medium) | G40 (Coarse) | Test Method |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nominal Size (mm) | 0.18–1.00 | 0.30–1.00 | 0.50–1.40 | 0.71–2.00 | ISO 11125-2 |
| Hardness (HRC) | ≥ 60 HRC (min. 700 HV) | ISO 11125-4 | |||
| Density (g/cm³) | ≥ 7.0 | ISO 11125-5 | |||
| Water-Soluble Chlorides | ≤ 25 mg/kg | ISO 11125-7 | |||
| Oversize retained on top sieve | ≤ 2% | ≤ 2% | ≤ 2% | ≤ 2% | ISO 11125-2 |
| Moisture content | ≤ 0.5% by mass | ISO 11125-3 | |||
| Breakage rate (%) | Report on data sheet | ISO 11125-6 | |||
Cast steel abrasives with carbon content 0.85%–1.20%. Available as spherical shot or angular grit. Widely used in foundry and shipbuilding applications.
| Parameter | Requirement (Shot) | Requirement (Grit) | Test Method |
|---|---|---|---|
| Carbon Content (%) | 0.85 – 1.20 | 0.85 – 1.20 | Chemical analysis |
| Manganese (%) | 0.60 – 1.20 | 0.60 – 1.20 | Chemical analysis |
| Silicon (%) | 0.40 – 1.50 | 0.40 – 1.50 | Chemical analysis |
| Sulfur (%) | ≤ 0.05 | ≤ 0.05 | Chemical analysis |
| Phosphorus (%) | ≤ 0.05 | ≤ 0.05 | Chemical analysis |
| Hardness (HRC) | 40–51 HRC | 56–65 HRC | ISO 11125-4 |
| Density (g/cm³) | ≥ 7.2 | ≥ 7.2 | ISO 11125-5 |
| Defective particles | ≤ 10% by count | ≤ 10% by count | ISO 11125-6 |
| Water-Soluble Chlorides | ≤ 25 mg/kg | ≤ 25 mg/kg | ISO 11125-7 |
Cast steel shot with carbon content ≤ 0.20%. Provides compressive stress peening with reduced substrate damage risk. Preferred for aerospace component preparation.
| Parameter | Requirement | Test Method |
|---|---|---|
| Carbon Content (%) | ≤ 0.20 | Chemical analysis |
| Manganese (%) | ≤ 1.20 | Chemical analysis |
| Silicon (%) | ≤ 1.50 | Chemical analysis |
| Sulfur (%) | ≤ 0.05 | Chemical analysis |
| Phosphorus (%) | ≤ 0.05 | Chemical analysis |
| Hardness (HV10) | 100–250 HV10 | ISO 11125-4 |
| Density (g/cm³) | ≥ 7.4 | ISO 11125-5 |
| Defective particles | ≤ 10% by count | ISO 11125-6 |
Full specification tables for copper slag, coal furnace slag, nickel slag, iron furnace slag, olivine, staurolite, and garnet per ISO 11126 Parts 2–8.
| Abrasive Type | Conductivity Limit | Chloride Limit | Grade |
|---|---|---|---|
| Copper Slag (ISO 11126-3) | ≤ 250 μS/cm | ≤ 25 mg/kg | ✓ Pass |
| Coal Furnace Slag (ISO 11126-4) | ≤ 250 μS/cm | ≤ 25 mg/kg | ✓ Pass |
| Nickel Slag (ISO 11126-5) | ≤ 250 μS/cm | ≤ 25 mg/kg | ✓ Pass |
| Iron Furnace Slag (ISO 11126-6) | ≤ 250 μS/cm | ≤ 25 mg/kg | ✓ Pass |
| Olivine (ISO 11126-7) | ≤ 250 μS/cm | ≤ 25 mg/kg | ✓ Pass |
| Staurolite (ISO 11126-8) | ≤ 250 μS/cm | ≤ 25 mg/kg | ✓ Pass |
| Garnet (ISO 11126-8) | ≤ 250 μS/cm | ≤ 25 mg/kg | ✓ Pass |
| Silica Sand (ISO 11126-2) | ≤ 250 μS/cm | ≤ 25 mg/kg | ⚠ Restricted |
⚠ Moisture content ≤ 0.2% by mass required for all non-metallic abrasives (ISO 11127-3). Oversize retained on top sieve ≤ 2% by mass (ISO 11127-2). Undersize passing bottom sieve ≤ 5% by mass.
Angular abrasive produced as a by-product of copper smelting. High hardness and density. Widely used in marine and structural steel fabrication.
| Parameter | Fine Grade | Medium Grade | Coarse Grade | Test Method |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Particle size (mm) | 0.2–1.0 | 0.4–1.4 | 0.8–2.0 | ISO 11127-2 |
| Bulk density (kg/m³) | 1200–1600 | 1200–1600 | 1200–1600 | ISO 11127-4 |
| Mohs hardness | 6–7 | 6–7 | 6–7 | Mohs scale |
| Water-soluble chloride | ≤ 25 mg/kg | ISO 11127-6 | ||
| Conductivity | ≤ 250 μS/cm | ISO 11127-7 | ||
| Moisture content | ≤ 0.2% by mass | ISO 11127-3 | ||
| Free silica content | ≤ 1% by mass (health) | XRD analysis | ||
| Surface profile achieved | 30–60 μm | 50–80 μm | 70–110 μm | ISO 8503-3/4 |
Visual assessment grades, cleanliness tests, surface profile requirements, and preparation method selection — the four pillars of steel surface preparation compliance.
| Grade | Description | Typical Use |
|---|---|---|
| Rust A | Steel surface largely covered with adherent mill scale; little or no rust | New steel, minimal weathering |
| Rust B | Steel surface beginning to rust; mill scale beginning to flake | Partially weathered steel |
| Rust C | Steel surface on which mill scale has rusted away; visible pitting | Significantly corroded steel |
| Rust D | Steel surface on which mill scale has rusted away; general pitting visible | Heavily corroded steel |
| Sa 1 | Light blast-cleaning — loose mill scale, rust, foreign matter removed | Low-performance coatings |
| Sa 2 | Thorough blast-cleaning — most contamination removed; gray appearance | General industrial coatings |
| Sa 2½ | Very thorough blast-cleaning — near-white metal; slight staining only | Anti-corrosion coatings |
| Sa 3 | Blast-cleaning to visually clean steel — white metal; no visible contamination | High-performance coatings |
| Profile Grade | Fine Comparator (μm Rz) | Coarse Comparator (μm Rz) | Application |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fine (F) | Rz 25–60 μm | — | Thin protective coatings, <100 μm DFT |
| Medium (M) | Rz 60–100 μm | Rz 60–150 μm | General industrial coatings |
| Coarse (C) | — | Rz 150–250 μm | Heavy-duty coatings, offshore structures |
| Extra Coarse (X) | — | Rz >250 μm | Thermal spray coatings, metallizing |
| Measured per ISO 8503-4 (replica tape) or ISO 8503-5 (stylus profilometer). Comparators per ISO 8503-1 and ISO 8503-2. | |||
Test methods for assessing soluble salt content, chlorides, oil/grease, and dust before coating application.
| Part | Test | Method | Acceptance Limit (Typical) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ISO 8502-3 | Dust assessment | Pressure-sensitive tape | Quantity ≤ 2; Size ≤ 2 | 5-class scale for quantity and size |
| ISO 8502-6 | Soluble contaminants (Bresle) | Bresle patch sampling | ≤ 20 mg/m² NaCl equivalent | Offshore: ≤ 10–50 mg/m² depending on spec |
| ISO 8502-9 | Conductimetric chloride | Field conductivity meter | ≤ 20 mg/m² NaCl eq. | Simplified field method |
| ISO 8502-2 | Chloride (laboratory) | Potentiometric titration | Project-specific | Lab confirmation method |
| ISO 8502-4 | Condensation risk | Relative humidity / dew point | Surface ≥ 3°C above dew point | Mandatory pre-blast check |
| ISO 8502-12 | Water-soluble iron salts | Ion chromatography | Project-specific | Corrosion product detection |
Step-by-step test procedures for sampling, particle size analysis, hardness, density, moisture content, and contamination assessment per ISO standards.
Correct sampling is fundamental to obtaining representative test results. Both metallic and non-metallic abrasives require systematic sampling from production batches or deliveries.
Sieve analysis determines the particle size distribution and conformance to specified grades. Results define surface profile potential and equipment compatibility.
Hardness is critical for abrasive performance and surface profile achievement. Chilled iron grit must achieve ≥ 700 HV; cast steel shot 390–530 HV for standard grades.
Apparent bulk density affects blast equipment calibration, flow rates, and production cost estimation. Required for both metallic and non-metallic abrasives.
Chloride contamination in abrasives can transfer to blasted surfaces, causing premature coating failure. Limit: ≤ 25 mg/kg for all non-metallic abrasives.
Conductivity measurement provides a rapid assessment of total water-soluble ion content, indicating overall contamination level from all ionic species present.
Systematic quality control checklists and procedures for abrasive inspection, blast cleaning verification, surface preparation acceptance, and coating application readiness.
Structured workflow for achieving full compliance with ISO abrasive standards from specification selection through final inspection sign-off.
Define substrate type, coating system, environment, and performance requirements to select appropriate ISO standard.
Choose metallic (ISO 11124) or non-metallic (ISO 11126) abrasive and appropriate grade for required surface profile.
Document cleanliness grade (ISO 8501), profile class (ISO 8503), and contamination limits (ISO 8502) in the project specification.
Test incoming abrasive per ISO 11125/11127 test methods. Obtain and review certificate of conformance.
Blast clean per ISO 8504. Inspect per ISO 8501/8502/8503. Record all results on inspection reports.
Issue signed acceptance certificate. Retain full traceability package for warranty and regulatory purposes.
| Property | Metallic Abrasives (ISO 11124) | Non-Metallic Abrasives (ISO 11126) | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| Particle size (oversize) | ≤ 2% retained on top sieve | ≤ 2% retained on top sieve | ✓ Measured |
| Particle size (undersize) | ≤ 5% passing bottom sieve | ≤ 5% passing bottom sieve | ✓ Measured |
| Moisture content | ≤ 0.5% by mass | ≤ 0.2% by mass | ✓ Measured |
| Water-soluble chlorides | ≤ 25 mg/kg | ≤ 25 mg/kg | ✓ Measured |
| Conductivity | ≤ 25 μS/cm (extract) | ≤ 250 μS/cm (1:10 suspension) | ✓ Measured |
| Hardness | Grade-dependent (100–700 HV) | Mohs 6–8 (type dependent) | ✓ Measured |
| Density | ≥ 7.0 g/cm³ (iron/steel) | ≥ 1.0 g/cm³ (type dependent) | ✓ Measured |
| Defective particles | ≤ 10% by count (metallic) | N/A | ⚠ Visual |
| Free silica | N/A (metallic) | ≤ 1% (health & safety) | ⚠ Critical |
ISO abrasive and surface preparation standards are applied across critical industrial sectors where corrosion protection, coating performance, and asset integrity are paramount.
Hull plates, ballast tanks, deck structures
Process vessels, piping, storage tanks
Jackets, topsides, risers, subsea
Structural steel, beams, plates
Re-coating programs, spot repair
External FBE, tape wrap, 3LPE systems
Airframe components, landing gear
Body panels, chassis, brake components
Turbines, boilers, wind towers
Reactors, heat exchangers, columns
Dams, gates, penstocks, pipelines
Stadia, industrial buildings, silos
Engineering reference tools, selection guides, and comparison charts to support abrasive specification, testing, and quality control decision-making.
Matrix comparing metallic vs. non-metallic abrasives across profile, hardness, recycling, cost, and environmental factors.
Visual particle size distribution charts for all ISO-graded metallic and non-metallic abrasives with sieve mesh equivalents.
Cross-referenced hardness scales: HRC, HV, HB, HRA, and Mohs for abrasive material selection and specification writing.
Field and laboratory conductivity test procedures with equipment calibration guides and acceptance limit reference tables.
ISO 8503 profile grade reference charts, replica tape procedures, and profilometer calibration requirements.
ISO 8502 test method guides covering dust, soluble salts, chlorides, oil, and condensation risk assessment.
Downloadable QA/QC checklists for incoming abrasive inspection, blast operations, and surface pre-coating acceptance.
Standardized inspection report formats aligned with ISO 8501, 8502, and 8503 measurement and recording requirements.
Engineering terminology used in ISO abrasive standards and surface preparation specifications, with authoritative definitions for inspection and specification writing.
Engineering questions about ISO abrasive standards, testing, and surface preparation requirements answered by technical experts.
Expert-level articles on ISO abrasive standards, testing procedures, surface preparation engineering, and industrial compliance.
Detailed comparison of ISO 11124-3 (high-carbon) and ISO 11124-4 (low-carbon) cast steel shot, including hardness ranges, breakage rates, surface profile outcomes, and application guidance.
Read Article →Step-by-step guide to performing the ISO 11127-7 conductivity test, including equipment calibration, sample preparation, calculation methods, and interpretation of results against the 250 μS/cm limit.
Read Article →Comprehensive technical review of ISO 8503-1/2 comparator assessment, ISO 8503-5 replica tape (Testex), and stylus profilometry — when to use each method and how to correlate results.
Read Article →Practical comparison of Bresle patch and field conductimetric methods for soluble salt assessment, with worked examples, acceptance limit discussion, and guidance on choosing between methods.
Read Article →Engineering guide to correctly applying ISO 8501-1 rust and blast-cleaning grades in coating project specifications, including common specification errors and how to avoid them.
Read Article →Case study-based guide to applying ISO 11124–11127 abrasive specifications and ISO 8501–8504 surface preparation standards on offshore topsides and subsea coating projects.
Read Article →The ISO Abrasive Specifications Hub is a comprehensive technical knowledge base dedicated to ISO standards governing abrasive materials, surface preparation, blast cleaning, testing, and quality control in industrial coating applications.
Our platform provides authoritative interpretations of ISO 11124, ISO 11125, ISO 11126, ISO 11127, ISO 8501, ISO 8502, ISO 8503, and ISO 8504 standards — covering both specification requirements and practical implementation guidance for engineering professionals.
We serve abrasive manufacturers, coating inspectors, QA/QC specialists, procurement engineers, corrosion engineers, and asset integrity managers across shipbuilding, oil and gas, offshore structures, infrastructure, and industrial manufacturing sectors.