OAW/OAC/SAFETY 10 Flashcards
(42 cards)
Combustibles
Easily ignited materials that stay ignited easily.
-wood, paper, etc
Non-combustibles
Not easily ignited
- metal, asbestos
Materials that are not usually combustible can be with excess oxygen
Fire extinguishers- Class A
Class a fired are ordinary combustion- wood, paper- and there’s just water inside
Fire extinguishers- Class B
Caused by flammable liquids - filled with carbon dioxide to get rid of oxygen.
Fire extinguishers- Class C
Caused by electrical equipment - filled with foam
Fire extinguishers- Class D
By combustible metals like lithium - filled with fire retardant powders or dry chemicals
Welding in confined spaces - must haves
Ventilation and a fire watcher
Ventilation keep harmful vapours out of your lungs
Fire watcher keep watch for fires while you’re welding.
Deep burns
Third degree burns
Damage nerves, blood, muscles, etc, and cause permanent damage.
Skin is black and charred or a ring around the wound.
Superficial burns
First and second degree burns
Less damage and surface burns
First degree are sunburns, slight burns, etc
Second degree it starts to blister
Fire triangle
Fire needs the triangle to survive - oxygen, fuel, and heat
Respirator
Block out tiny little particles and vapours, the stuff you can’t see.
There are two kinds, negative pressure and positive pressure.
Dust mask
Same job as respirator but larger particles.
Metal fumes fever
Caused by inhaling metal vapours, zinc oxide, a condition characterized by flu symptoms
Types of light
Three types of light associated with welding:
Ultraviolet - can’t experience but get sunburnt
Infrared - experienced through heat
And viable light
Exposure can cause serious damage
Safety glasses: why?
Protect you from sparks flying or metal particles that hike grinding or cutting. Also protect you from uv rays - clear glass
Welding helmet/lenses
Protect you from bright light rays. Your helmet protects your periphery vision. There are three lenses in your helmet, two clear to protect you from uv and one dark that can change. That one protects from visible and infrared.
Acetylene
C2H2
Acetone is saturated into cement and then acetylene is pumped into the porous holes as carbonized material.
Draw limit - 1/7 of tanks volume per hour
Calcium carbide and water.
Working pressure - 10psi
Slightly unstable - 15psi
Explosive - 25psi
Stored - 250psi
Oxygen
O2
Added to fire and makes it burn harder
Stored at 2200psi
Pumped into tank that is made with one seamless forged metal tank - extrusion. Air is pumped in and out at freezing levels and oxygen bubbles out, then it’s collected.
OAC
Oxy-acetylene cutting
OAW
Oxy-acetylene welding
Gas leak
Spray soap and leak will bubble
Cylinder pressure
oxygen - 2200 psi (stored), 10 psi (working)
acetylene - 250 psi (stored), 10 psi (working)
pressure is always the same no matter the size of the tank, the volume would just be different.
Cylinder safety features
How it’s made - one seam
Acetylene & acetone - made this way so it won’t explode
Safety plug - melts at 100 degrees C when it heats up (pressure gets higher too) so it can slowly release the gas so it doesn’t explode
Which way do you turn oxygen valve?
righty tighty lefty loosey