Blacksmith and Metalworking Forum
This is a discussion on Fume Fever within the Blacksmithin' forums, part of the Blacksmithing category; Ok before I begin with this post I want to say I understand the severity of ths subject with the ...
| |||||||
| Register | FAQ | Calendar | Search | Today's Posts | Mark Forums Read |
| ||||
|
Did you do anything since the nail in the fire that would cause the headaches? Do you have a forge hood to get the smoke out of your work area? Breathing the fumes (not heavy smoke, but the clear exhaust from the fire) is a good way to get carbon dioxide and carbon monoxide into your system. Firefighters help out here. What are the symptoms of co and co2 exposure and how long to recover?
__________________ Tools do not make the blacksmith, the blacksmith makes the tools. gc If you do not build a box, then you do not have to think outside the box. If someone questions your standards, they are not high enough. |
| ||||
|
I just have to offer some input on this subject, but I should caution EVERYONE to take this with however many grains of salt you feel appropriate. I welded in a major lighting and power transmission pole manufacturer for over 18 years, I worked at this company for almost 25 years total. I would guess that 80 - 90 % of our products got a galvanized finish. This company boasted some of the largest galvanizing tanks in the country if not the world at one point. Many times, if a product was built wrong and not caught until after it was put through the "big silver swimming pool", as we fonding called it, I would have to effect repairs on the product. This involved cutting out/off the offending part and re-positioning and re-welding it to proper specifications. This, in turn involved burning a fair amount of zinc. I always remember a "sweet" smell (this can only mean I breathed the fumes) when the zinc would burn and leave a white chalky residue on the adjacent metal. After the repair was made, the common procedure to repair the the galvanized finish was to heat the metal surface with a O/A torch and melt sticks of zinc, called "galvalloy", onto the new welding or new metal. I never wore a respirator or took any precaution to avoid the fumes. It has been over five years since this exposure and to this day I have no health issues (that I know of) from this exposure. I know about Jim Paw Paw Wilson's demise, and having met him feel a great loss in the smithing world, as well as someone I would like to have called a friend and I hold the deepest respect for him and his legend, as well as his survivors. However, I also know from meeting Paw Paw, that he was a very heavy smoker, and having a father suffering from lung cancer after 50+ years as a smoker, I can't help wonder if part of Paw Paw's ailment wasn't due to smoking as a contributing factor. I know I will receive all kinds input on this subject and I welcome responses. I just feel that from my own experience, a small exposure to zinc fumes is not something to fear, but rather, BE AWARE that it could be hazardous, based on time exposed and your personal lifestyle. Was I lucky? Will it catch up with me eventually? I don't know. I am, however, more cautious with known hazards, especially due to Paw Paw's misfortune
__________________ While never issued evenly, common sense should always be deployed uniformly. Semper Fi! Its not just for breakfast anymore!! |
| |||
|
Drinking milk when exposed to zink fumes is supposed to help or at least that is what I have been told. I would think one nail especialy if you didn't notice that you were breathing yellow smoke would not be the issue. No doubt different people will react at different levels.
|
| |||
|
might be heat stroke or repeated hammering.. sometimes if I work to long I get a little dehydrated and get this crazy cramp thing going on.. but I dunno, might be the fumes.. might be anything.
__________________ Deep poetry- A monk told Joshu: "I have just entered the monastery. Please teach me." Joshu said: "Pull my finger." At that moment the monk was enlightened. |
| |||
|
A couple of thoughts: Drinking anything does not help when the exposure you recieved is an inhalation one. CO poisoning is a really nast one for a couple of reasons, First it has no odor or taste, When you smell fumes from something you know is giving off CO gas it is from something else not the CO, Like exhaust from an engine. One thing you may notice is headaches, And if you are not one that suffers from headaches it is a tip that if you know you may have been exposed to CO fumes that they are indeed giving you problems. More exposure may lead to muscle weakness and disorientation. This is a major cause of loss of life in house fires. Most folks that die in confined space fires are from smoke inhalation and not from burns. Many times the burns come after the death. Co replaces the oxygen in your red blood cells and that inhibits the cells to carry oxygen to the body, I t hasa a much greater affinity to the red blood cells than does oxygen. So we can say that a red blood cell will take in CO easier than it will take and carry oxygen. In order to resore the balance of oxygen carrying capability the cells have to be replaced by new ones,,I think I remember that takes four or five days. However if you have chronic exposure, like from daily exposure to toxic inhalants. (smoking is one of them) Then you have a greater risk. And it seems that the impact you may be aware of with an exposure is lessened and may not seem as severe at the time. I am sure I will get some fuss from smokers on this but I did not make the systems..,,,,,, |
| |||
|
What Rich said -- Blood cells can carry CO2, 02, or CO. The first two are neccesary. Blood cells must carry CO2 from the body back to the lungs. Blood cells are 3 times or 5 time more likely (I can't remeber the word) to bond with oxygen, so when exposed to oxgen in the lungs they (most of them at least) give up the carbon dioxide for oxgen. But red blood cells are 40 times more likely to bond with carbon monoxide, they ain't going to give it up very easy. I saw this on TV 20 or 30 years ago, so it could be way wrong, but at least it sounds good. Maybe we studied this in biology too. Well the mind's the first to go. I think I've been setting too close to the charcoal.
__________________ Dogs will be dogs but men must choose to be men. JohnW |
| ||||
|
Welded lots of galvanized, prefer to tig it with silicon bronze filler, less fumes. Respirator yes! MilK does help you stop retching your guts up, based on my personal experience. Headaches don't wait until the next day from exposure, they are swift and brutal. Occasional nails in the fire, with a good hood/exhaust and not sniffing your fire all the time, minimal exposure What I've said is based PURELY on personal experience |
| |||
|
I'd say that since you were outdoors when you were forging, that a single galvanized nail would'nt have given you the level of exposure for a "zinc headache".
__________________ \"Good judgement comes from experience. Experience comes from bad judgement\" ...Will Rogers |