Тёмный

Welding Safety for New Welders 

Weld.com
Подписаться 1 млн
Просмотров 29 тыс.
50% 1

Welding safety is important, no matter who you are or what you're welding. In this video, we'll discuss some of the key safety tips you need to know when welding. We'll also discuss some of the important personal protective equipment you'll need, and give you a few helpful welding safety tips and precautions to keep in mind.
If you're a new welder, then this video is a must-watch! We'll discuss the key safety tips you need to know, as well as some of the important welding safety gear you'll need. We'll also give you a few helpful welding safety tips and precautions to keep in mind when welding!
Are you ready to join the ultimate welding community? Get ready to level up your welding game by downloading the WELD™ app on Google or Apple stores or logging in at www.weld.com. Explore exclusive videos and resources to enhance your learning and connect with our advisors and fellow welders to get your questions answered. Don't forget to check out our amazing member discounts from our brand partners and enter to win mystery boxes every month. Join us for insightful podcasts and follow us on social media to stay in the loop!
linktr.ee/WeldDotCom
Disclaimer:
Weld.com is an affiliate and industry influencer that earns from qualifying purchases through our posted and affiliate links. Our videos are provided for informational purposes only and while we strive for accuracy and reliability, we cannot guarantee it. As tools, products, and techniques are constantly evolving, we cannot assume responsibility for any errors or omissions in our content. By accessing our content, you agree to review and comply with our and any third-party terms and policies.
Always exercise caution when using any tools, equipment, techniques, or processes shown in this content. If you are unsure, seek advice from a licensed professional. Any reliance on the information presented is entirely at your own risk. By watching this content, you expressly and voluntarily assume all risks, including but not limited to death, disability, and/or serious physical injury related to the use of any tools, equipment, techniques, or processes. In the event of an injury, seek medical attention immediately.
Disclaimer: As an Affiliate and Industry Influencer, Weld.com earns from qualifying purchases via our posted links and affiliate links. Videos produced and made available by Weld.com or any of its affiliates, subsidiaries, or representatives (collectively, "Weld.com") are provided for informational purposes only. Although every effort has been made to provide the most accurate and useful information from sources believed to be reliable, no warranty, expressed or implied, is made regarding accuracy, adequacy, completeness, legality, reliability, or usefulness of any information. As tools, products, materials, equipment, techniques, and applicable laws, regulations and ordinances are constantly changing, Weld.com cannot and does not assume any responsibility or liability for the accuracy of the information contained herein. Under no circumstances shall Weld.com be responsible or liable in any way for any content, including but not limited to death, injury, errors, or omissions in the content, or for any loss or damage of any kind incurred as a result of any content communicated in a video, on a website or by other means, whether displayed by Weld.com, or a third party in its original or a modified form. All content is subject to Weld.com and any third party's applicable terms and policies. Carefully review all terms and policies.
ALWAYS USE CAUTION WHEN UTILIZING ANY DISPLAYED TOOLS, EQUIPMENT, TECHNIQUES OR PROCESSES. IF EVER IN DOUBT, CONSULT A LICENSED PROFESSIONAL. ANY RELIANCE ON THE PRESENTED INFORMATION IS STRICTLY AT THE VIEWERS OWN RISK. EACH VIEWER EXPRESSLY AND VOLUNTARILY ASSUMES ANY AND ALL RISKS INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, DEATH, DISABILITY, AND/OR SERIOUS PHYSICAL INJURY RELATED TO THE USAGE OF ANY TOOLS, EQUIPMENT OR TECHNIQUES OR PROCESSES IN THE PRESENTED CONTENT. IN THE EVENT OF AN INJURY IMMEDIATELY SEEK MEDICAL ATTENTION.

Опубликовано:

 

21 июл 2024

Поделиться:

Ссылка:

Скачать:

Готовим ссылку...

Добавить в:

Мой плейлист
Посмотреть позже
Комментарии : 51   
@bobhigginbotham9035
@bobhigginbotham9035 2 года назад
Excellent video! Great info Shea!
@charlesthomas7970
@charlesthomas7970 2 года назад
Couple of things to add here. Seriously consider a cartridge respirator. Use a P100 with a correctly sized facepiece. Especially if you MIG or stick stainless, weld on galvanized or anything else nasty. They are hot, uncomfortable and can be a pain in the ass to wear. Your friends/coworkers might give you some shit about wearing one, but you only have one pair of lungs, so protect them. They can go pound sand. At one point you will need to weld on something greasy or oily. You will probably have some degreaser in a convenient spray can around the shop. You will grab it, spray down your work then get to welding. Next thing you will experience is your chest tighten to the point you can't get a full breath. That goes away fairly quickly, but the constant cough that comes later doesn't. Your mistake: you used a chlorinated solvent. The UV light from the arc broke it down into some nasty stuff, one being phosgene. It was used in chemical warfare in WWI. That cough is because phosgene can cross link the proteins in lungs, scarring the lining. I don't mean this to come off sounding like some nut job, but it happened to me. Wasn't paying attention, grabbed the wrong can and really, really screwed myself up. Coughed for almost 3 months after that. Do yourself a favor and get rid of chlorinated solvents.
@ypaulbrown
@ypaulbrown 2 года назад
Charles, this is very important information for those who do not know...thanks for posting ....it can also happen on parts that have been cleaned a long time ago and then recleaned with a harmless cleaner, as the residue is still there....also the high temperature converts chlorinated solvents into Phosgene...beware any thing that has been used in the Dry Cleaning business also...thanks for posting....Pau
@icyfyer
@icyfyer 2 года назад
They always overlook the respiratory protection. The P100 is actually a very comfortable mask in my experience.
@ypaulbrown
@ypaulbrown 2 года назад
Shea, wishing you a speedy recovery on your hand injury.......
@geonerd
@geonerd 2 года назад
What happened to Camera Dude and his excellent audio production skills?
@ypaulbrown
@ypaulbrown 2 года назад
he is still in Florida, Shea is way up north in Canada
@ponuru7798
@ponuru7798 2 года назад
I really needed a video like this. This was very helpful.
@johnlast7528
@johnlast7528 2 года назад
Keep up the good work.
@jasonproper5528
@jasonproper5528 2 года назад
And don’t touch the touch the hot material
@badgerfactory
@badgerfactory 2 года назад
Good job professor. Awesome teacher at the college
@alexschnell2344
@alexschnell2344 2 года назад
oh shit! cool to see my welding prof on here 😎 lets go shea great work!
@danielchambers1958
@danielchambers1958 2 года назад
Very good info👍
@bnewton239
@bnewton239 2 года назад
where can i get that welder shirt with the canada logo.
@sebataskulinarjikw5259
@sebataskulinarjikw5259 2 года назад
Bagus bgt
@fusinweldingfabrication3255
@fusinweldingfabrication3255 2 года назад
Hope you guys enjoyed this one!
@sjagain
@sjagain 9 месяцев назад
@10:38 he says, "Avoid touching the...." What was it he said we shouldn't touch?
@Mike40M
@Mike40M 5 месяцев назад
The main hazard in my opinion is the fire hazard. Even hours after using welders and angle grinders, a fire can spread.
@rpavlik1
@rpavlik1 2 года назад
Really good content. Would have been nice to hear about breathing protection though, was pretty horrifying to see how an n95 looked after a little welding practice. And a lav mic would really help, the audio quality was hard to listen to
@welderleekoreanwelder4273
@welderleekoreanwelder4273 2 года назад
👍👍👍👍good
@grogu.
@grogu. 2 года назад
Always wanted to be first 😂🥇
@doogiepotter3631
@doogiepotter3631 2 года назад
If you ain't first your Last.
@ypaulbrown
@ypaulbrown 2 года назад
Grogu, now you are first...cheers
@Welddotcom
@Welddotcom 2 года назад
You won today
@bluejack644
@bluejack644 2 года назад
I've seen some hilarious cautionary video's in weekly safety meetings. Long story short, please don't drag race the fork lifts through the break area. Also don't throw your grinding sparks towards a co worker while that co worker is playing with lighter fluid. Hilarity will ensue but it's also a recipe for disaster. Lol. People will lose fingers and stuff.
@ypaulbrown
@ypaulbrown 2 года назад
great comment....and those things do go on in a poor shop environment.....
@NotQuiteFirst
@NotQuiteFirst 2 года назад
Good welding info, terrible audio
@jordanstimpson7543
@jordanstimpson7543 2 года назад
Love you daddy
@PowerElectronic
@PowerElectronic 2 года назад
A video on welding safety, and no mention to smoke hazards. This is not serious.
@DurzoBlunts
@DurzoBlunts 2 года назад
Missiles are fun. Missiles in the shop are not fun.
@ypaulbrown
@ypaulbrown 2 года назад
very true...unless you are working at a missile building shop.....
@ebogar42
@ebogar42 2 года назад
I'd never wear boots unless I felt I needed steel toes. I hate boots and don't think they're better than high top basketball shoes to work in. I like to be able to move my ankles freely and move quickly. You can't move quickly in heavy boots. I've worked in basketball shoes many times and never had any issues. Even roofing.
@ypaulbrown
@ypaulbrown 2 года назад
just wait till you get some slag on that thin material or down the ankle, while wearing basketball shoes, you may change your mind about boots
@ebogar42
@ebogar42 2 года назад
@@ypaulbrown My pants go over my shoes so they aren't getting down my shoes, and I'm good with a little heat. I've felt it on my boots before too. Just kick it off and keep truckin.
@ebogar42
@ebogar42 2 года назад
@@ypaulbrown Don't they sell pieces of thick leather that goes around shoes? I think they do. If not that's an easy invention. lol
@ypaulbrown
@ypaulbrown 2 года назад
@@ebogar42 they are called Spats.
@ifell3
@ifell3 2 года назад
The sound quality is gash. Seriously invest £80 into something half decent.
@georgewashington1106
@georgewashington1106 2 года назад
Yeah, safety. Meanwhile, I'm watching videos of guys in India standing in a foot of oil and water, in flip-flops and a t-shirt, with a handheld shield, cutting up an oil tanker
@icyfyer
@icyfyer 2 года назад
Try it at home.
@Dr.Vincent_D_Gilmer
@Dr.Vincent_D_Gilmer Год назад
Those are the videos that make me less nervous about welding lol
@medsfromtrees2612
@medsfromtrees2612 2 года назад
New welder tip: Don't use the grind function on you're welding helmet, companies designed this function to make you blind. Cause absolutely no ones remembers to turn it off.....and too the people than can. Y'all gor a left eye could borrow😂
@medsfromtrees2612
@medsfromtrees2612 2 года назад
@@ypaulbrown note to self.....pay attention to grammar. Hahaha you know what I ment paul
@medsfromtrees2612
@medsfromtrees2612 2 года назад
@@ypaulbrown comments edited. I had a pretty lady talking to me when this was going down...as a man I must oblige the lady.
@RobinDobbie
@RobinDobbie 2 года назад
I'm still not sure why I shouldn't use the grind setting. Is is because I might forget to turn it back to "weld?" Or because some helmets auto-darkening doesn't turn off solidly? My cheap-o helmet still sorta triggers the darkening for a couple seconds after turning the knob to "grind" when I start grinding.
@ypaulbrown
@ypaulbrown 2 года назад
@@medsfromtrees2612 best answer on the internet yet.....cheers, PB
@icyfyer
@icyfyer 2 года назад
@@RobinDobbie He assumes you'll forget to change it back to weld.
@MAASAIWITHPASSPORT
@MAASAIWITHPASSPORT 2 года назад
I never wear glasses and boots
@ypaulbrown
@ypaulbrown 2 года назад
great way to get a nice injury that might be life changing, ask me how I know.....
@MAASAIWITHPASSPORT
@MAASAIWITHPASSPORT 2 года назад
@paul Brown here in my village we use sunglasses because you can't safety glasses and boots typical village welder check my on my RU-vidr .
@ypaulbrown
@ypaulbrown 2 года назад
@@MAASAIWITHPASSPORT I will check you RU-vid, cheeers
Далее
What is the Risk of Getting SHOCKED While Welding?
11:15
Hamster Kombat 20 July Mini Game
00:13
Просмотров 10 млн
НОВАЯ ПАСХАЛКА В ЯНДЕКСЕ
00:20
Просмотров 273 тыс.
Welding Safety Training
13:19
Просмотров 151 тыс.
Electric Welding Safety: How to be safe
24:36
Просмотров 33 тыс.
Welding Positions Explained
17:49
Просмотров 53 тыс.
Welding Safety: Electric Shock
9:10
Просмотров 55 тыс.
3 Flux Core Welding Myths DEBUNKED
11:49
Просмотров 1,9 млн
Welding Safety: Personal Protective Equipment
9:17
Просмотров 35 тыс.
Introduction to Plasma Cutting
21:13
Просмотров 916 тыс.
MIG Welding Safety Tips
12:49
Просмотров 3,5 тыс.
Start Your Welding Business With These Tools!
16:27
Просмотров 653 тыс.