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#1
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I"m planning on sandblasting with sand. Worried about cillacosis (sp).
When evaluating a respirator for use in sandblasting with sand, what characteristics of the mask should I look for? - Mike |
#2
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In article .com,
"mhorowit" wrote: I"m planning on sandblasting with sand. Worried about cillacosis (sp). When evaluating a respirator for use in sandblasting with sand, what characteristics of the mask should I look for? - Mike Get a pressure hood instead of a mask. Positive pressure inside the mask keeps out unwanted gasses and particulate matter. |
#3
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![]() "john smith" wrote in message ... In article .com, "mhorowit" wrote: I"m planning on sandblasting with sand. Worried about cillacosis (sp). When evaluating a respirator for use in sandblasting with sand, what characteristics of the mask should I look for? - Mike Get a pressure hood instead of a mask. Positive pressure inside the mask keeps out unwanted gasses and particulate matter. Is the issue here fumes or simply not wanting to inhale dust? |
#4
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On Thu, 18 May 2006 18:08:28 -0400, "Kyle Boatright"
wrote: "john smith" wrote in message ... In article .com, "mhorowit" wrote: I"m planning on sandblasting with sand. Worried about cillacosis (sp). When evaluating a respirator for use in sandblasting with sand, what characteristics of the mask should I look for? - Mike Get a pressure hood instead of a mask. Positive pressure inside the mask keeps out unwanted gasses and particulate matter. Is the issue here fumes or simply not wanting to inhale dust? Depends on what the OP is blasting on a small scale, but in industry you wear a full hood even if it's just blasting paint off a bridge. I'm not sure if that is a Michigan MIOSHA or OSHA reg. Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair) www.rogerhalstead.com |
#5
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On Thu, 18 May 2006 18:08:28 -0400, "Kyle Boatright"
wrote: "john smith" wrote in message ... In article .com, "mhorowit" wrote: I"m planning on sandblasting with sand. Worried about cillacosis (sp). When evaluating a respirator for use in sandblasting with sand, what characteristics of the mask should I look for? - Mike Get a pressure hood instead of a mask. Positive pressure inside the mask keeps out unwanted gasses and particulate matter. Is the issue here fumes or simply not wanting to inhale dust? dust- Mike |
#6
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On 18 May 2006 09:17:17 -0700, "mhorowit" wrote:
I"m planning on sandblasting with sand. Worried about cillacosis (sp). When evaluating a respirator for use in sandblasting with sand, what characteristics of the mask should I look for? - Mike IF Silicosis is your only worry any good mask that seals well AND keeps the dirt out of your eyes will work. However when sand blasting we are usually removing something and that may be every bit as bad as the sand. Normally for sand blasting we wear full hoods with breathing air supplied. There are *relatively* inexpensive hoods available for painting and take either tank air or forced air that would work. You probably know this already but, never use air from a normal compressor even for a short time. It contains oil vapor and even carbon monoxide. I have made my own hood using a pair of garbage bags, a face shield some Duct tape, sump pump hose and a squirrel cage fan like the ones used for cooling equipment. I've seen vacuum cleaners used to provide a *lot* of air, but be careful as some of these may contain a lot of ozone in the output stream if the motor cooling air is included in the exhaust. For a "one off" use or only rarely sand blasting I'd Use the old "plastic raincoat" trick, tape a face mask to the inside of the garbage bags. Cut the bag away in front the mask so you can see out. Cut arm holes in the proper locations. Make the openings snug and remember the top of the bag goes on top of your head so the arm holes do not go at the top. Garbage bags are cheap so you can use the old trial and error method without spending a lot of money. Using Duct Tape fasten the "air hose" at your waist and just under your armpits. with the hose (sump hose?) running right up your back bone and ending behind your head. This pressurizes the entire area around your head and keeps you breathing clean air. (IF the intake gets clean air) I used two lengths of sump hose and a squirrel cage fan. The fan needs to be well away from where you are working so it doesn't pick up dust, dirt, or chemicals. My apologies if you know this already, but don't sandblast inside a building. It'll create a mess you'll never entirely remove. Do the work outside so the wind can carry the dust away. As a note, "sand blasting is NOISY". Even with only 90 psi it's noisy. Commercial sandblasters are deafening. Get some of the little ear plugs that you roll up and stick into the ears. You'll be glad you did. As a tip, get some Saran Wrap(TM) the kind that sticks to everything. Cut some a bit larger than the face mask and smooth it over the front surface. When it gets dirty just peel it off and replace it. I now have a commercial full breathing hood and it has layers of plastic over the face plate. When one gets dirty you gab a tab and peel. It's just like a new face plate and more convenient than the Saran Wrap (TM) but a lot more expensive. If you can afford it, for small jobs the sand blasting cabinets are fantastic but they are rather impractical to purchase for just a few small jobs. Those work well with "bead blasting" and reclaim the beads. Still the beads don't last all that long. Good Luck, Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair) www.rogerhalstead.com |
#7
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![]() mhorowit wrote: I"m planning on sandblasting with sand. Worried about cillacosis (sp). When evaluating a respirator for use in sandblasting with sand, what characteristics of the mask should I look for? - Mike ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Common sand is mostly crystaline silica (quartz), which is major cause of cillacosis. Look in your yellow pages under "abrasives" and ask for Dupont Starblast, which is less than 5% silica (Starblast XL costs a little more but is less than 1% silica, its what I use). Do a google search for Dupont Starblast and read about its other advantages. You can email Dupont to ask closest supplier. My occupation (cemetery lettering) involves sandblasting and most all lettercutters I know used to use pressure hoods until they found out about Starblast. But a good pressure hood is expensive and must have the supply air run thru a proper filter (such as a Bullard Model 41) which is heavy,expensive and a pain to lug around from site to site. Since we found Starblast we just use a good dual cartridge half mask respirator and a sandblast hood. Search "MSA respirator" and/or look for them in Lowes or Home Depot. Rich A. |
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