My dad, a dentist, and my uncle, a radiologist, taught me, at a very impressionable extremely young age, that the proper way to cinch your lead fishing weight to your line is with your front teeth.
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But not if you remove one tile at a time, from 6 feet away, wear a mask, and take a shot with multiple boosters. Oh wait. LOL
Every time this topic comes up, it just proves to me common sense ain't as common anymore.
Powder coating or High Tech coating liquid powder coat almost eliminate lead dust..on coated lead slugs. .My moderators are much cleaner only running powder coated slugs...one way to minimize lead exposure and get cleaner barrels with less fouling..Hi guys.
One post motivated me to write this topic.
I am sorry but it is not true at all. I have lead poisoning from the lead dust. It is enough when you shoot indoors frequently or you chrony your gun indoors. Our silencers are called LDCs (lead dust collectors) for a reason. Have you seen the interior of such a silencer? It is covered with lead dust. I also had a talk with an indoors shooting range employee. His BLL (blood lead level) is 10 times as high as the norm - 500 ug/L. He does not inhale lead on purpose. My BLL was about 100ug/L - twice as high as the norm. Now I am more or less at the norm level. I did some chelation to speed the excrection up.
The most dangerous form of lead is lead dust. Almost all inhaled lead is absorbed through the lungs into your bloodsteam. Then, some of it is excreted through the sweat, bile and urine. The rest is built into the bones from which the excrection can last many years.
The lead inhalation absorbtion is in contrast with the ingested lead as the absorbtion through the digestion system is about 10% only.
Stay safe guys!
Lead is no joke.
Gotta ask, so what do they do to or with the water?The indoor range I've visited locally has a continuous flow of water over it's backstop presumably to reduce airborne lead. That seems like a reasonable thing to do for employees. It would also help visitors but the potential exposure in an hour or so of shooting is not like working there for 8 hours a day every day.
I agree with washing hands before handling food and other reasonable precautions. I also shoot almost exclusively outdoors and I shoot into a pellet trap that is 25-35 yards away. So any dust from the impact would seemingly not get to me. But I handle pellets and sometimes take my guns apart including the shrouds and there is obviously visible dust in the shroud. I clean it off with a wetted paper towel and throw the towel away.
Getting a test to be sure what you are doing isn't harming you is probably a reasonable idea too but I doubt I will. I think doing reasonable common sense things is enough at my age.
This makes me wonder why a lot of pellet gun shooters are still alive, including myself. As a youngster in the 60's I put my pellets in my mouth and walked hunting doves for days on end. Many did that.
If the silencer has any vent holes around I use a duct tape to get rid of them. I remember the lead rings imprinted on the air reservoir when the vent holes were in the shroud.Has anyone actually measured lead particle emissions with and without a suppressor?
This is not about life and death as the shooters do not suffer from the acute lead poisoning. It is more about low dose, chronic exposure. What can you expect from that? Many things. E.g. poor short term memory, low mood, depression, lower IQ, gastrointestinal issues and many, many more. It may be hard to connect the dots to determine that your quality of life was lowered because of the chronic lead exposure. The shooting range worker which I mentioned about developed diabetes.This makes me wonder why a lot of pellet gun shooters are still alive, including myself. As a youngster in the 60's I put my pellets in my mouth and walked hunting doves for days on end. Many did that.
Exactly. Different people have different abilities to cope with heavy metals. They also excrete heavy metals with different efficiency. Some people have more tendency to accumulate.It's cumulative. The lead from the pellets you put in your mouth as a kid is building up with the lead you have accumulated over the years. It won't affect you until it does. If your lead levels are high then it would only make sense to limit exposure. Shooting lead pellets in your basement for years could certainly be a potential hazard. You wouldn't know unless you tested for lead on the surfaces.
This is what we get when we shoot lead projectiles. Bonus points for doing it under ~130 bars of pressure.Breathing sub micron sized particles would be much worse still.
Man up and face reality.Know your audience. Read the room.
Common sense is a start but it goes deeper than that.Every time this topic comes up, it just proves to me common sense ain't as common anymore.
This is the best reply i have read so far .Very glad to see this topic discussed and people on board with the facts. I made it clear in the barrel cleaning thread that I opposed certain methods of cleaning due to the increased risk of lead exposure. It is a serious concern that all airgunners should be mindful of. Had one guy laughing at my post mentioning the risks involved, some people seem like they already suffer from some lead exposure.
Lead poisoning *most likely* won't kill ya, but it definitely can cause more cognitive impairment than natural aging, increased pain / inflammation in your body, increased hyperactivity (adhd like symptoms) and irritability, and gastrointestinal issues. Ignorance is NOT bliss. You'll be a very miserable person if you expose yourself to certain heavy metals over the course of your life to your own detriment.
So, be mindful when cleaning your barrels and LDC's, use disposable patches if possible. Always start with a wet patch. Cleaning your LDC? Give it a soak. Get things wet first before you go disturbing a collection of fine lead dust, because a wet particle won't go floating around in the air like dry particles. Avoid direct skin contact with the mass collection of lead particulates, your skin is a sponge.
-Matt
Maybe should use a mask still or forced air respirator or stop shooting. Here is the thing, life is deadly and eventually we all get dead and somehow I think Pb poisoning will not be the end of most of us.
A lead dust collector, LDC, is a joke, it was and is a PC way of attempting to separate air guns from powder burning guns. They are suppressors and that is all they do, suppress muzzle report.