Bolting: Silicosis and Respirators
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I drill, grind and break quartz for my living and then in my spare time im out drilling granite and developing sport routes/breaking stones for bouldering landing zones. I've often thought about the possibilities of silicosis and after a particularly windy day placing anchors at eye level and getting blasted in the face with rock dust im starting to really wonder if i should be using a respirator. |
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I know Andrew McDowell had a crazy immune system collapse like 8 years ago or so and he believed it was due in part to silicosis, he did A TON of ground up drilling in NC. Once he recovered he figured out a respirator system and never had any more issues....but i dont know if hes on the proj to get beta from or if he even climbs anymore.... Nathan Brown might know. |
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Drill vacs are now an osha requirement, I have a Milwaukee model that's pretty awesome. |
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s.price wrote: Your kinda right TB. Yea, I carry my Milwaukee air tester everywhere I go. |
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Tradiban wrote: Would be neat to see what kind of readings you get outside with no wind drilling a single hole at face/shoulder level. |
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TB: I hadn't even considered a drill vac for some reason. I'm gonna look into that for sure! Seems like a good way to collect some rock dust for potential glue-in/patching down the road as well! :D |
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It is not just for drilling. We really should be using them while doing cleaning, along with safety glasses that seal around the eyes. Beside not filling your lungs with cancer causing substances and mold spores or scratching your eyeball, you can work a lot faster not having to half lean away and squint. |
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s.price wrote: When did Milwaukee start making a particulate meter? Don't you have a long history of glue intake though? |
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i never knew about particulate air measuring devices... |
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M Sprague: The closed safety glasses is one that i need to follow through on for sure. I've definitely had a lot of eye irritation after long days of cleaning and bolting and never really thought much of it. |
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J Squared: Haha. No joke. I honestly think that i get more respiratory irritation at the bouldering gym than from anything i do outside. :p |
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s.price wrote: Haha, sorry, I was thinking you were a shoe repair guy. Must be confused (put in a lot of glue-ins over the years too). Took me 30 years to take the idea of a face mask and glasses a little more seriously. |
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https://www.npr.org/templates/transcript/transcript.php?storyId=675253856
Miners are having to cut through silica to get the coal out and it is causing some serious problems. |
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Kelley: Lol. White lung is what you get at climbing gyms. |
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I just asked my girlfriend who is a doctor if I should wear something while bolting... her response: |
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s.price wrote: When did Milwaukee start making a particulate meter? I was joking about the meter because I don't care what OSHA says no exposure is acceptable to me and no one is walking around with a meter, except you is seems, while work is actually going on. That said sometimes I can't fit the vac where i want and/or I forgot my mask so I go for it. I pretty sure I won't die too early.Regarding chalk, I've done a solid 18 years in gyms, 11 of which were full time. I had the doc check me out a few times and lungs seem to be all good. Everything I read basically says chalk wont clog the lungs like asbestos or silica because.... science. The world is really dusty and the human body is made to deal with it, it's certain particulates that are the problem. |
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To build on this conversation, the problem is that silica can't be broken down by the body. The form as encountered in rock dust is a crystaline structure that is effectively an abrasive particle like the silicon carbide or aluminum oxide in sandpaper. That basically sits in your lungs and rubs and rubs and rubs until the inflammation and scaring develops into Silicosis. This is why respiratory protection is so important, because you don't really have the ability to get over the silica you inhale. |
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I've run a couple clinics on re-bolting techniques and best practices and in the slide deck I cover PPE considerations. I've also written a short primer that might be of interest to people reading this thread and worth discussing/debating. |