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The Secret To Remediating 80% Faster – What The Big Companies Don’t Want You To Know.

Hey readers, welcome back to our blog. Our last post on how dry ice blasting is profiting the restoration industry was a huge hit on social media. Thank you for sharing it, for those of you who did! We received a ton of feedback from contractors, and today we want to answer their most pressing questions! Specifically, how this all works, what materials dry ice blasting can clean, and a ballpark estimate of what it costs.

If you’re a Contractor in the Remediation game, your jobs typically consist of mould removal, asbestos abatement, fire restoration, and lead decontamination. As you already know, every job presents a different set of challenges and constraints and it’s up to you to work your problem-solving magic to make it work! This is where Dry Ice Blasting makes your life incredibly easy, so keep reading.

The Workflow Process

Whether it’s asbestos, mould, fire damage, or lead – each job has the same 3 step process.

The first step is site preparation. Your team comes to section the space off. The area is encapsulated as you normally would, is placed under negative air pressure, with the air scrubbers running. As this takes place, the dry ice blasting team you are subcontracting with is arriving at the site to set up their equipment. A seamless transition is when your preparation is completed at the same time as their setup. Special note: If this was for fire restoration, you would already have the site gutted before the blasting team arrived, and you probably don’t have to encapsulate the area.

The second step is the blasting team begins cleaning. You get to stand back and enjoy the show or send your team to the next job. The advantage of dry ice blasting as a service is it compresses your time. Depending on the space, the material being remediated, and the square footage – dry ice blasting can clean an entire 2000 sq.ft. space in as little as half a day. Dry ice blasting has different nozzles and hose lengths which enables the technicians to easily clean hard to reach areas with ease. Dry ice blasting cleans to government regulatory standards. The before and after results are obvious once the team has completed their work.

The third and final step – which can sometimes commence the same day your team sets up, is the final clean up. The team will sweep and vacuum up the debris that was blasted off the walls, ceiling, nooks and crannies, then decommission their equipment. Depending on the material that had to be blasted, you just saved days of manual labour. Instead of having your team bottle-necked, you were able to have them on other job sites for set up or final clean up. This is a much more efficient process. Freeing up your time and labour allows you to take on more work without more burden

In some instances the dry ice team will use drop cloths to capture falling debris, making it easy to dispose of later. For instance, on one job we did where we blasted Lead paint off the exterior of a Church, we rolled up the drop cloth that captured the paint particles and had it safely disposed of. Similarly, in every Fire Restoration job, after we finish blasting we typically apply a smoke seal which further speeds up the job’s completion.

“All that sounds good, but what materials can you clean?”

Every job is basically the same – we blast up high and work our way down low. The dry ice “sublimates” which basically means it turns to gas and leaves no trace. The only thing remaining on the floor is the debris of the material being remediated. Here’s a quick rundown of the 4 major abatement jobs:

  • Dry Ice blasting has unique abilities for asbestos abatement. It is best suited for the textured walls and ceilings; cement, vinyl tiles, adhesives, sealants, and caulking. We can easily and quickly break up solid asbestos. Dry ice blasting also efficiently removes asbestos fibres and asbestos dust from high up and in hard to reach areas.
  • Mould removal is one of the fastest and easiest jobs. Dry ice blasting expedites your project completion time. We’ve worked with contractors facing impossible deadlines, and enabled them to get the job done on time. We’ve worked with one company that was quoted 6 weeks to clean up mold, and Carmad completed it within 6 days. 
  • Fire damage jobs are fairly quick and simple, but as you already know, the difference is within the extent of damage present. Additionally, some substrates require a little more time than others, but dry ice can clean char, soot, and smoke damage off of wood, concrete, and steel, plus it doesn’t matter if it’s in the joists or in the attic – we can get it just as easy.
  • Lead paint removal is typically a fast and easy job. Due to the dry ice leaving zero secondary waste, lead paint chips are easy to clean up. As mentioned before, lead chips land on a drop cloth where the disposal costs are minimal.

In conclusion, subcontracting to a dry ice blasting service will enable you to complete jobs up to 80% faster. Ballpark estimates for Dry ice blasting start at $1750 for a half-day of work. If you don’t know the timeframe to expect dry ice blasting to take, then give us a call for a free estimate. We are Carmad Industrial, this is our 20th year in business, and we service all of western Canada – British Columbia to Manitoba, plus the territories. Thank you for reading! We’ll chat soon.

 

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How Dry Ice Blasting is Profiting The Restoration Industry

A “good” problem to have, but a problem no less.

There are two forces at play that are working in the Restoration Industry’s favour. There is increasingly erratic weather, and older properties all over North America that were built with asbestos are being renovated. Not everyone is happy about these circumstances. There’s the homeowner who just discovered the cost of removing asbestos so that he can update his furnace – something he wasn’t initially budgeting for. There are also environmental activists who can’t shout loud enough. Restoration contractors, however, are in a unique position to capitalize on both. 

More opportunity brings more work. More work means happy employees, there are positive cash flow and growing profits. The downside of having more work is scalability. Sometimes you just don’t have enough technicians to seize every opportunity. Ever turn work away because you’re too busy?  This is where Dry Ice Blasting comes in.

What is Dry Ice Blasting?

Also known as Carbon Dioxide Cleaning, this technology combines dry ice pellets the size of grains of sand with compressed air. The pellets move at subsonic speeds with enough velocity to remove adhesives, paints, grease, grime, mold, and smoke damage to name a few. If you’ve never seen one in action, think of a sandblasting, but without the sand, the mess to clean up, and the health risks of silica.

Advantages of Dry Ice Blasting

Dry ice is compressed carbon dioxide. The pellets are so small, that they do not have enough kinetic energy to damage surfaces. This means that it’s a non-abrasive cleaning technique. In other industries, Dry Ice Blasting is used to clean fingerprints off electronics and grease off machining equipment. It has this uncanny ability to clean without damaging even the most delicate surfaces. 

As mentioned above, Dry Ice Blasting is similar to Sandblasting. Only, there’s no mess to clean up after. This is known as “secondary waste”. Sandblasting leaves piles of carcinogenic silica sand all over the floor. By contrast, dry ice pellets evaporate on contact. So there’s zero secondary waste and nothing to clean up afterwards. Likewise, evaporating carbon dioxide quickly dissipates into the air. This means the technicians are not at any health risk if they are exposed to small amounts of carbon dioxide. Similarly, dry ice has no impact on the environment. Because of this fact, it’s approved by the FDA, EPA, and USDA.

How is Dry Ice Blasting helping Restoration Companies?

Restoration companies are busy and easily backlogged. If they can get jobs done faster, they can take on more work and make more money. Simple. Restoration companies can subcontract to Dry Ice Blasting services to assist with asbestos abatement, mold removal, and fire restoration. Instead of a team of technicians manually scrubbing and scraping the area clean over a week – Dry Ice Blasting gets the same job done in a fraction of time. In other words, Dry Ice Blasting reduces labour costs. Depending on the job, Dry Ice Blasting reduces the encapsulation area and even reduces that amount of waste. There are fewer cleanup and disposal fees, again, saving you time and money.

In summary, Dry Ice Blasting is an environmentally friendly abatement technique that will shorten the turnaround time, reduce labour costs, and ultimately let you keep more money in your pocket. If you’re a restoration contractor looking for a dry ice blasting solution, we would love to help out. We’re Carmad Industrial and we service Restoration companies all over western Canada – BC to Manitoba, plus the Yukon and Northwest Territories. Call us today for a free quote!

This is a technician cleaning smoke damage with dry ice blasting for a fire restoration job