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[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 29, Volume 8]
[Revised as of July 1, 2007]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 29CFR1926.353]

[Page 241-243]
 
                             TITLE 29--LABOR
 
CHAPTER XVII--OCCUPATIONAL SAFETY AND HEALTH ADMINISTRATION, DEPARTMENT 
                                OF LABOR
 
PART 1926_SAFETY AND HEALTH REGULATIONS FOR CONSTRUCTION--Table of Contents
 
                      Subpart J_Welding and Cutting
 
Sec. 1926.353  Ventilation and protection in welding, cutting, and heating.

    (a) Mechanical ventilation. For purposes of this section, mechanical 
ventilation shall meet the following requirements:
    (1) Mechanical ventilation shall consist of either general 
mechanical ventilation systems or local exhaust systems.
    (2) General mechanical ventilation shall be of sufficient capacity 
and so arranged as to produce the number of air changes necessary to 
maintain welding fumes and smoke within safe

[[Page 242]]

limits, as defined in subpart D of this part.
    (3) Local exhaust ventilation shall consist of freely movable hoods 
intended to be placed by the welder or burner as close as practicable to 
the work. This system shall be of sufficient capacity and so arranged as 
to remove fumes and smoke at the source and keep the concentration of 
them in the breathing zone within safe limits as defined in subpart D of 
this part.
    (4) Contaminated air exhausted from a working space shall be 
discharged into the open air or otherwise clear of the source of intake 
air.
    (5) All air replacing that withdrawn shall be clean and respirable.
    (6) Oxygen shall not be used for ventilation purposes, comfort 
cooling, blowing dust from clothing, or for cleaning the work area.
    (b) Welding, cutting, and heating in confined spaces. (1) Except as 
provided in paragraph (b)(2) of this section, and paragraph (c)(2) of 
this section, either general mechanical or local exhaust ventilation 
meeting the requirements of paragraph (a) of this section shall be 
provided whenever welding, cutting, or heating is performed in a 
confined space.
    (2) When sufficient ventilation cannot be obtained without blocking 
the means of access, employees in the confined space shall be protected 
by air line respirators in accordance with the requirements of subpart E 
of this part, and an employee on the outside of such a confined space 
shall be assigned to maintain communication with those working within it 
and to aid them in an emergency.
    (3) Lifelines. Where a welder must enter a confined space through a 
manhole or other small opening, means shall be provided for quickly 
removing him in case of emergency. When safety belts and lifelines are 
used for this purpose they shall be so attached to the welder's body 
that his body cannot be jammed in a small exit opening. An attendant 
with a pre-planned rescue procedure shall be stationed outside to 
observe the welder at all times and be capable of putting rescue 
operations into effect.
    (c) Welding, cutting, or heating of metals of toxic significance. 
(1) Welding, cutting, or heating in any enclosed spaces involving the 
metals specified in this subparagraph shall be performed with either 
general mechanical or local exhaust ventilation meeting the requirements 
of paragraph (a) of this section:
    (i) Zinc-bearing base or filler metals or metals coated with zinc-
bearing materials;
    (ii) Lead base metals;
    (iii) Cadmium-bearing filler materials;
    (iv) Chromium-bearing metals or metals coated with chromium-bearing 
materials.
    (2) Welding, cutting, or heating in any enclosed spaces involving 
the metals specified in this subparagraph shall be performed with local 
exhaust ventilation in accordance with the requirements of paragraph (a) 
of this section, or employees shall be protected by air line respirators 
in accordance with the requirements of subpart E of this part:
    (i) Metals containing lead, other than as an impurity, or metals 
coated with lead-bearing materials;
    (ii) Cadmium-bearing or cadmium-coated base metals;
    (iii) Metals coated with mercury-bearing metals;
    (iv) Beryllium-containing base or filler metals. Because of its high 
toxicity, work involving beryllium shall be done with both local exhaust 
ventilation and air line respirators.
    (3) Employees performing such operations in the open air shall be 
protected by filter-type respirators in accordance with the requirements 
of subpart E of this part, except that employees performing such 
operations on beryllium-containing base or filler metals shall be 
protected by air line respirators in accordance with the requirements of 
subpart E of this part.
    (4) Other employees exposed to the same atmosphere as the welders or 
burners shall be protected in the same manner as the welder or burner.
    (d) Inert-gas metal-arc welding. (1) Since the inert-gas metal-arc 
welding process involves the production of ultra-violet radiation of 
intensities of 5 to 30 times that produced during shielded metal-arc 
welding, the decomposition of chlorinated solvents by ultraviolet rays, 
and the liberation of toxic fumes and gases, employees shall

[[Page 243]]

not be permitted to engage in, or be exposed to the process until the 
following special precautions have been taken:
    (i) The use of chlorinated solvents shall be kept at least 200 feet, 
unless shielded, from the exposed arc, and surfaces prepared with 
chlorinated solvents shall be thoroughly dry before welding is permitted 
on such surfaces.
    (ii) Employees in the area not protected from the arc by screening 
shall be protected by filter lenses meeting the requirements of subpart 
E of this part. When two or more welders are exposed to each other's 
arc, filter lens goggles of a suitable type, meeting the requirements of 
subpart E of this part, shall be worn under welding helmets. Hand 
shields to protect the welder against flashes and radiant energy shall 
be used when either the helmet is lifted or the shield is removed.
    (iii) Welders and other employees who are exposed to radiation shall 
be suitably protected so that the skin is covered completely to prevent 
burns and other damage by ultraviolet rays. Welding helmets and hand 
shields shall be free of leaks and openings, and free of highly 
reflective surfaces.
    (iv) When inert-gas metal-arc welding is being performed on 
stainless steel, the requirements of paragraph (c)(2) of this section 
shall be met to protect against dangerous concentrations of nitrogen 
dioxide.
    (e) General welding, cutting, and heating. (1) Welding, cutting, and 
heating, not involving conditions or materials described in paragraph 
(b), (c), or (d) of this section, may normally be done without 
mechanical ventilation or respiratory protective equipment, but where, 
because of unusual physical or atmospheric conditions, an unsafe 
accumulation of contaminants exists, suitable mechanical ventilation or 
respiratory protective equipment shall be provided.
    (2) Employees performing any type of welding, cutting, or heating 
shall be protected by suitable eye protective equipment in accordance 
with the requirements of subpart E of this part.

[44 FR 8577, Feb. 9, 1979; 44 FR 20940, Apr. 6, 1979, as amended at 55 
FR 42328, Oct. 18, 1990; 58 FR 35179, June 30, 1993]





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