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by Steltek 1558 days ago
On the contrary, I am not NASA. I'm not even a consumer electronics company. I'm a hobbyist at home, soldering things at my desk or table. Lead-free is the least of my problems when building something and I don't believe "just wash your hands" is sufficient for cleaning my workspace (or kitchen table?) of possible lead contamination.
2 comments

Fellow hobbyist here. Actually your biggest health risk is industrial asthma from flux fumes. I know professionals who have spent a good fraction of there lives soldering with no lead poisoning issues. Lead needs to be consumed or inhaled for it to be an issue. The guy I meet who did have lead poisoning, large bore rifle shooting coach, from spending to much time at the “wrong end” of the rifle range. Lots of lead dust there.
It definitely is enough. I don't know where the myth that looking at lead kills you started, but unless you are eating it or breathing it in (soldering is not hot enough to vaporize lead) there's nothing to worry about.
>I don't know where the myth that looking at lead kills you started

For a large subset of western society it's highly fashionable to give a lot of shits about health and safety. I'm not saying this is a bad thing to care about but let's be honest here, when you treat abstract concepts like a minor religious deity there's some baggage that comes with that. Let the feedback loops run their course for a decade or three and combine that with the fact that it's very easy to be scared of things you're not familiar with and you get the current situation. This is why people go crazy over a long forgotten package of asbestos shingles sitting on some shelf in the maintenance department's storeroom or think you're gonna get black lung from using an antique coal stove a couple times a year. Their belief system tells them to go crazy and they don't have the experience to know they don't need to.