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Flame Resistant Fabrics
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Originally posted by lynnl View PostSearch for Nomex fabric. It's the stuff military flight suits are made from. Good up to 700F.
Seems pretty readily available.
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Originally posted by JoeLee View PostDoes anyone know of any companies that sell fire resistant fabric?? Specifically the foil covered stuff like those suits that foundry workers wear when their close to the furnace.
JL..................
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Over here it’s called Morgan chrome blanket, morganite is the owner ( I have had several dozen suits made of it, it works, I’ve stood 3, away from a stack of slabs 10” thick 9 high 5’ wide at 600 degrees for quite some time, there are undergarments you need btw, but it works
mark
best flame resist, wool!, we used furnace clothing called Melton cloth, trousers and jackets, again under garments required
there was mm1 and mm2, (molten metal)
in my op the Melton was better than the chrome, ok it didn’t bounce the infra red but if you got hit by a splash ( and I did regularly, plenty of scars) you faired better, although the test for Melton was 900c most of the stuff splashing about wasn’t iron, it was steel, think 1400+c, plus being hit by a big splash was the same as being hit by a sledgehammer, people forget steel is 8 ish tons a cubic metre
markLast edited by boslab; 12-28-2020, 04:53 PM.
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Not sure what your intended use is.
Wool is fire resistant as is without added chemicals. I have long sleeve button up wool shirt that I breakout for small welding jobs.
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Originally posted by lynnl View PostSearch for Nomex fabric. It's the stuff military flight suits are made from. Good up to 700F.
Seems pretty readily available.
But this form of protection methodology would not make them good for use in a welding area or as protection against splash from a welding or cutting torch. Or I guess it would... as long as we're OK with it being a one time use sort of product.
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Kevlar is also heat resistant
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Search for Nomex fabric. It's the stuff military flight suits are made from. Good up to 700F.
Seems pretty readily available.
Leave a comment:
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Welding blankets were my first thought prior to starting this post, but was wondering if there were any other options.
I don't want anything that is really thick and heavy. Looking for something along the order of a T shirt. Maybe a little heavier would be OK.
I have a fire retardant light weight welding jacket, It's light green in color. I'm sure you guys have seen them before. That weight material would be fine.
JL................Last edited by JoeLee; 12-28-2020, 01:33 PM.
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That shiny stuff you see in the big foundries is not so much flame resistant as it is heat reflective. I'm sure it's also flame resistant but the main application there is to turn away the intense IR heat.
Welding jackets are made from flame resistant material. Not flame PROOF but hard to get lit. And I'm pretty sure you can get the same material as welding pants. And of course they have welding blankets too. The blankets are to hold in the heat but at the same time they are also very resistant to being ignited. The one I have seems like it's a fiber glass product. But made with finer fibers in each of the big heavy strands than the usual coarse fiber glass used for composites.
The see through welding curtains are spark resistant. But I'm not sure how flame resistant they are once they start up.
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There's always McMasterCarr for pre-made stuff: https://www.voguefabricsstore.com/th...nt-fabric.html
Fabric: https://www.mcallistermills.com/high...rature-fabrics
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Flame Resistant Fabrics
Does anyone know of any companies that sell fire resistant fabric?? Specifically the foil covered stuff like those suits that foundry workers wear when their close to the furnace.
JL..................Tags: None
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