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Metal particles float around in the air during metalworking, before using
any sort of particle removal. When inside, sometimes my filter fan is used
on its highest setting.
There are some uses for compressed air that a brush cannot accomplish. For example, blowing out a cutting fluid filled dirty hole produced by
drilling and threading. Canned compressed air does that very well.
This is a nym-shifting troll persistently making a nuisance of itself...
--
Corvid <
[email protected]> wrote:
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From: Corvid <[email protected]>
Newsgroups: rec.crafts.metalworking
Subject: Re: Experience with little, cheap compressed air, battery-powered air blowers?
Date: Thu, 12 Aug 2021 21:49:44 -0700
Organization: The 27 Club
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On 8/12/21 6:50 PM, John Doe wrote:
Like any of the ones they sell on Amazon?
I enjoy using compressed air to remove metal dust,
What a fool.
A) high-speed metal particles in the eyes
B) metal dust in the sinuses and lungs
I had one college metal shop instructor who made it clear that metal
chips are to be cleared away with brushes. The air was kept up high,
almost out of reach. I don't remember anyone ever using it.
At a another school, there were homies on the other side of the bench directly across from me, blasting aluminum dust clouds my way.
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