Eagler's Nest
General Category => Off Topics and General Interest => Topic started by: Rich Snyder on January 01, 2014, 06:21:30 PM
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In preparation for welding my XL fuselage, I got my oxyacetylene tanks from Airgas in New Hampshire. I wanted to try them out, so the first thing I did was bend a couple of nails into loops and welded one to each side of my tank cart. These were for attaching a small chain that will keep the tanks from falling off of the cart. All went well until my wife and I were ready to hit the hay that night. The Carbon Monoxide monitor started to alarm at 80 ppm of CO. I had no idea that CO is part of the chain of events in burning oxyacetylene. It is winter here now and very cold in my barn and tractor shed. I don't want my welds to cool off too fast and get brittle. Here's my question. Do you guys weld inside? How closed in are the areas that you all weld in? I shut my tanks off at the tank valve after use in my heated cellar shop for safety. Do I have to fashion some sort of ventilated welding booth? Thanks, Rich.
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Here is some reading on it... (http://heatinghelp.com/forum-thread/146028/Strange-CO-problem)
Sounds like you may have to shut the Co monitor off to weld in the cellar and ventilate after...
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Thanks for the interest Dan. I read the attached CO forum and found it interesting. CO is an insidious killer. There is good reason to be cautious with it. We all want to get to the flying stage of the Legal Eagle build. Rich.
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I've heard carbon monoxide is a by product of incomplete combustion.
ALL combustion, not just automobiles and funaces.
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I've never seen torch welded steel cool off too quickly with air, but I've never welded above the Mason Dixon line either. I would recommend tacking only and moving it to another location (garage, shop, greenhouse, hanger, etc) for the final weld. That would minimize your exposure.
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It's 20 deg F in my shop today. My propane tank for the shop furnace is almost empty and my truck is out of order. It is supposed to be -25 outside next week. I won't be welding or gluing for a while.