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by tjoff
2919 days ago
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I don't doubt that you are right. But that whole description could, to my inexperienced ears, just as well be an argument as to why you really really should be wearing gloves at all times. If the gloves slow down the process enough so that when you feel cold you have time to put down the container and remove the gloves (less than five seconds?). I mean, to me I'd imagine that is the sole purpose to wear them in the first place? It would, I imagine, also help from panic. If you notice that you got LN on your gloves there is less panic than getting it on your skin - less chance of a reflex reaction that just makes things worse. |
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For example if you are arc welding and some nasty blob of molten metal drops on your hand, gloves will provide "heat through" time cushion to remove the gloves more or less safely (easily removable layer also helps avoid hot/cold blob sticking to your body), but keeping the gloves on will most likely still result in a burn. There is a hidden danger with cold that cold does not radiate like heat and we have much less intuitive understanding of how cold affects the skin. Sometimes people get frostbitten during winter activities without them noticing that something was too cold for too long.