by charliehm » Wed Nov 09, 2005 10:09 pm
Dean,
I've seen co-workers put into the hospital from zinc poisoning because someone else was scapping machinery in the same space without informing everyone around them that they would be flame cutting on zinc coated materials and that they should either clear out or get a proper respirator. And this wasn't some tiny confined space without good ventilation. It was one of the engine rooms on an aircraft carrier.
I would have been exposed, too, except the minute I entered the space, I smelled the characteristic sweet, sickening smell of burnt galvanized, immedediately realized what was going on, and got myself out of there. What I didn't know was that there were unprotectected people in the space, which is why I go ballistic when anyone gets casual about welding, grinding, burning zinc.
The fumes are harmful. The dusts --such as are produced by grinding-- are harmful. But, like any hazard, there are ways of mitigating the dangers and there are ways of handling the risks responsibly.
Charlie
There are 3 ways of doing work, but you can only have 2 of them at the same time:
FAST and GOOD isn't CHEAP. CHEAP and FAST isn't GOOD. CHEAP and GOOD isn't FAST.