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JOdowd

Lead hazards

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JO,

You need to work in a well ventilated area. I would not recommend using it in the house. I pour in my outside garage with the doors and windows open and a fan running. If you don't have a place like a garage, I would move out to the porch or somewhere outside. I have a friend that poured in his house and ended up getting lead poisioning and had to quit making lures all together. Another good idea is to wear a dust mask. You can get them cheap at any hardware supply store.

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I agree with everything rsinyard said.

Also wash you hands before you eat. Lead poisoning comes from ingestion. If you have been handling lead, change you cloths take a shower before picking up small kids. They are more susceptible to lead poisoning than adults.

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I picked up a very strong fan that will pull the smoke of a cig out the window so well that you can't tell that someone is even smoking. My friends that blow glass for a living gave me the fan so I don't know the brand but it's about 10 diameter and has mounting brackets on the sides and I think that you can buy it at home depot. Also I can tell you that you will need to wire a plug onto the end of the wire to use it. Good luck, and safety first. I get all crazy about stuff and have to sit back and think... fishing lures man, take it easy. So I completely empathize. If you can't pour lead than maybe buy some unpainted jig heads or unpainted spinnerbait wire forms w/lead head attached, or buzzbait's of the same nature and paint em and put the blades and what not on to personalize em.

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Depending on what you are using to melt lead, a respirator usually isn't needed. soft or pure lead melts at 621 deg. F and doesn't vaporize into the air until it reaches a temp of 900 deg. F. Proper ventilation is needed, I use a small fan and an open window in my basement. I don't recommend latex gloves while pouring, if it splashes on the the latex, it'll instantly melt it, and melted latex rubber is hard to get off your skin.

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Lead is absorbed through the skin but mostly through the gut. A trick that I learnt years ago in the UK and was passed on to me by quite a few lead workers who worked with lead all the time was to drink milk. Apparently it puts a lining on the stomach which helps prevent absorption of lead into the bloodstream. I was also told the calcium irons combined with lead making it more difficult to absorb and helped it pass through the body more easily. Anyway I did find a lot of lead workers who worked with lead on a regular basis did subscibe to the theory and did regularly drink milk. Lead useage in the plumbing industry was widespread and only really died out from the mid 70s on.

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Smalljaw,

What pouring technique are you using the results in slashing molten lead about? I have never splashed molten lead in over a decade of pouring. Getting a small burn is no fun regardless of the source, that's the kind of hazard I'm happy to gamble with. A few rounds of CHEMO hurt a lot more than a burn!

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