For decades, surface finishing has been the bottleneck of the modern machine shop. While CNC automation and lights-out manufacturing have revolutionized how parts are cut, the post-processing stage often remains stubbornly manual. Operators spend hours hunched over a blast cabinet, individually rotating small parts to achieve a uniform finish. It is tedious, inconsistent, and a poor use of skilled labor.
The traditional solution has been to purchase a dedicated tumble blast machine or an automated abrasive blasting cabinet. However, these systems typically cost between $2,000 and $10,000, require significant floor space, and are permanent fixtures. For shops that only need batch blasting occasionally, the ROI simply is not there.
Now, a new approach to blast cabinet automation is changing the math. Gimbel Automation has introduced the TumbleBlast™, a portable, drop-in automatic tumble basket that converts any standard blast cabinet into a hands-free finishing cell for under $1,000.
The Problem with Traditional Tumble Blast Equipment
When a shop needs to process hundreds of small machined parts, 3D-printed SLS components, or stamped metal pieces, manual bead blasting is not scalable. Operator fatigue leads to inconsistent surface finishes, and the labor cost destroys profit margins.
Upgrading to an automatic sandblaster or a dedicated tumble blast cabinet solves the labor issue but introduces new problems:
High Capital Cost
Dedicated tumble blast machines are expensive capital investments, often $3,000–$10,000+.
Floor Space
They require their own footprint in an already crowded shop floor.
Inflexibility
Once installed, a dedicated cabinet cannot easily be used for manual blasting of larger parts.
The Drop-In Automation Solution
The TumbleBlast™ system takes a radically different approach to automated shot blasting and bead blasting. Instead of replacing the entire cabinet, it is a self-contained motorized basket that simply sits inside the existing blast cabinet.
“The Gimbel Automation Auto-Tumble Baskets are the only units on the market that can simply be placed inside of the blasting cabinet when needed and removed when not needed. Every other option on the market not only costs two-to-ten times more, but are permanent to your cabinet.”
How It Works
1. Place the Unit
Set the entire TumbleBlast unit inside the current cabinet. Zero modifications required—it is designed to be installed and removed as needed.
2. Load the Parts
Add small parts, hard-to-hold parts, or full batches into the basket. Standard model handles up to 10 lbs; Giant handles up to 25 lbs.
Aim the blast gun (optional magnetic mount available), turn on the external control box, clamp the pedal, and walk away.
Unload freshly finished parts with uniform, consistent surface finishes. Run the next batch.
The result is continuous, unattended blasting that delivers uniform exposure and consistent finishes across the entire batch, freeing the operator to run another automated machine or perform quality control.
Two Models for Different Shop Needs
Gimbel Automation offers two versions of the TumbleBlast to accommodate different media types and volume requirements.
Standard TumbleBlast™
Giant TumbleBlast™
The company notes that these units are highly resilient. The large, semi-sealed stepper motor is protected by a complete enclosure and strategically located behind multiple metal plates. As a result, the TumbleBlast is currently in production use in hundreds of wet-blast and vapor-honing cabinets across the United States without issue.

Closing the Automation Gap in Surface Finishing
In the push toward the automated factory, shops often focus entirely on the spindle. They invest heavily in pallet changers, robotic machine tending, and self-centering vises. However, if those automatically machined parts pile up waiting for manual surface finishing, the overall throughput of the shop remains constrained.
By implementing an automatic tumble basket, shops can finally align their post-processing speed with their CNC automation output. At a price point starting under $900, the TumbleBlast™ pays for itself in labor savings within the first few batches.
For machine shops, additive manufacturing facilities, and production floors looking to eliminate manual labor without the massive footprint of a dedicated tumble blast machine, the drop-in approach is proving to be the smartest investment in the finishing department.
Replacement baskets, liners, and accessories are available for all TumbleBlast models. For more information, visit gimbelautomation.com or follow @gimbelautomation on Instagram.
Automate Your Blasting. Eliminate Manual Labor.
Turn your existing blast cabinet into a hands-free finishing cell.

