Doc Sprocket
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I have had the unpleasant experience of having to weld in the dark on a few occasions. Even with an auto mask, this involves having to strike what I call a "positioning arc", just to see where you are, and where you need to be. I have done this with a fixed shade mask a few times, when an auto wasn't available.
Guy I used to work for wanted me to use a cracked auto. The LCD was damaged and it was letting too much light thru in a few places. I politely told him to go fly a kite, I was pulling a work refusal until the situation could be remedied. No paycheck is worth guaranteed optical damage. It's amazing how fast a replacement mask showed up on my jobsite.
Guy I used to work for wanted me to use a cracked auto. The LCD was damaged and it was letting too much light thru in a few places. I politely told him to go fly a kite, I was pulling a work refusal until the situation could be remedied. No paycheck is worth guaranteed optical damage. It's amazing how fast a replacement mask showed up on my jobsite.


