• Thank you for visiting HeavyEquipmentForums.com! Our objective is to provide industry professionals a place to gather to exchange questions, answers and ideas. We welcome you to register using the "Register" icon at the top of the page. We'd appreciate any help you can offer in spreading the word of our new site. The more members that join, the bigger resource for all to enjoy. Thank you!

welding helmet cooling fan

Randy88

Senior Member
Joined
Feb 2, 2009
Messages
2,149
Location
iowa
I'm not looking at cooling exactly, but will those fans blow the smoke away from my face? I've been stick welding in front of a fan and apparently its not enough to keep the smoke away from me, or else its swirling up into my helmet. I now have a cough I can't seem to shake and I have a lot of hard surface welding to do yet. Just thinking of a way to blow the smoke away from my face is all, anyone have an experience with a fan cooled helmet or for what I need is it a waste of time, I've never had one before, but at this point I'm willing to give anything a try. If not anyone have any idea's?

I do own a air hose fed fresh air pump setup, but for welding its never worked worth a pinch of sh*t, too much stuff under the welding hood and for some reason it steams up the lens so I can't see out, that and its almost impossible to weld when using it.
 

clintm

Senior Member
Joined
Jul 7, 2013
Messages
974
Location
charlotte nc
Occupation
trucking,concrete recycling,grading, demolition
We just use a small squirrel cage fan preferably blowing from behind you
 

Scrub Puller

Senior Member
Joined
Mar 29, 2009
Messages
3,481
Location
Gladstone Queensland Australia
Yair. . .

Randy88 I use a fan sucking through a piece of inexpensive six or eight inch "elephant trunk" hose, it doesn't take much suck to grab the smoke and fumes and keep them out of your face . . . you position the sucky end right close by where you are welding

The hose is very flexible and light weight and I held it in place with a bracket mounted to a speaker magnet. . . . if you put "welding ventilation fans" into Google images you will get an idea.

Cheers.
 

Randy88

Senior Member
Joined
Feb 2, 2009
Messages
2,149
Location
iowa
Right now we've been using a 42 inch barn fan blowing from behind, but we must have air swirling around the machine we're welding on and somehow its getting back up the helmet, first time I've ever had this issue.

I'll rig up the suction fan idea in the morning, I've got a few bin aeration fans sitting around and it wouldn't take much to rig it up, never gave that a thought till scrub mentioned it. I've been trying the several fans from different directions thing and that didn't work at all.
 

Truck Shop

Senior Member
Joined
Dec 7, 2015
Messages
16,998
Location
WWW.
In mid 90's I welded alot of galvanized, mainly culvert. I used a Jackson battery pack three filter fresh air set-up. worked real well for me.

Truck Shop
 

Trashman

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jun 9, 2008
Messages
216
Location
Texas
Occupation
Garboligist
I'm not looking at cooling exactly, but will those fans blow the smoke away from my face? I've been stick welding in front of a fan and apparently its not enough to keep the smoke away from me, or else its swirling up into my helmet. I now have a cough I can't seem to shake and I have a lot of hard surface welding to do yet. Just thinking of a way to blow the smoke away from my face is all, anyone have an experience with a fan cooled helmet or for what I need is it a waste of time, I've never had one before, but at this point I'm willing to give anything a try. If not anyone have any idea's?

I do own a air hose fed fresh air pump setup, but for welding its never worked worth a pinch of sh*t, too much stuff under the welding hood and for some reason it steams up the lens so I can't see out, that and its almost impossible to weld when using it.

They make those?!?!? Man....I have been out of circulation too long...........
 

excavator

Senior Member
Joined
Oct 16, 2006
Messages
1,448
Location
Pacific North West
I have 2 different Speedglass fresh air setups with battery powered pumps and I believe they now make them to work with both battery or air hose pumps. They're abit pricey but well worth it for maintaining your health.(check EBAY, I bought one there, the pump was bad and Speedglass repaired it free of charge) I actually use mine more when I'm doing a lot of grinding as I can't handle the dust anymore.
 

norite

Senior Member
Joined
Jul 31, 2010
Messages
483
Location
Sudbury, Ontario, Canada
There is a helmet made by a company called airstream, with a built in fan, comes with a filter so you get pressurized air under the hood when it is down, doesn't need a tight seal on your face due to the positive pressure. Expensive though. :(

I think 3m makes something similar.

How about wearing a respirator, fairly inexpensive option but effective.

Ask your question on www.weldingweb.com , you will get all the options available.
 
Last edited:

Randy88

Senior Member
Joined
Feb 2, 2009
Messages
2,149
Location
iowa
Trashman, what I have is actually a setup divers use, we just put an electric motor on it instead of a gas engine. I bought it for working in grain bins and silo's for the dust and mold issues, there it works great, has a full head gear setup with it and my kids have used it for doing some recreational lake diving powered with a gas engine.

I originally wanted to do welding with it, but the mask is too large and bulky to fit under any helmet, it has a partial face mask, mainly for the mouth piece, but when you use that, it steams up the lens and you can't see to weld, after using for a while, if you've ever worn a scuba setup before, its not something you put on to weld with, the breathing is far different than a dust mask or face mask.

Norite, I've used the simple dust or face mask with filters and those never helped me at all for some reason. I got to thinking today while working, if I hooked my oiless compressor up to a helmet somehow, I could pressurize the helmet and not monkey with the face mask at all, I'd just put the compressor outside in fresh air and run the hose into the shop, I'll have to check into newer helmet options out there that might have the helmet sealed up somewhat, I've seen them at trade shows, just never really looked at them that close before. Couple that with scrubs idea of a suction fan and hose near the work piece and I might have the best of both worlds, pressurized helmet of sorts being fed clean fresh air and a suction taking fumes away from the work piece. Anyone ever done that before, does it work or just in theory, anyone see any downfalls to it I can't see right off hand??
 

Randy88

Senior Member
Joined
Feb 2, 2009
Messages
2,149
Location
iowa
95, that might just be what I'm looking for, I'll call and see what's all involved, as for the price, its far cheaper than some of the other outfits I've looked at on the internet. Anything is better than coughing for days after welding.
 
Top