Re: Update on welding with implanted defibrillator



On Jan 12, 10:40 pm, Don Foreman <dfore...@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
Summary:   not lookin' promising.

I've had contact with some good people:  a  senior fellow engineer at
a major ICD mfr, a former employee (engineer) of a major ICD mfr  and
friend of many years,  my wife's niece who is a former cardiac nurse
of 30+ years experience, and helpful others.

Findings:

There are reported cases of weldors returning to work with ICD's but
the reports are sketchy on details. One report mentions a minimum
distance of 24" between weldor and cables, work and torch.  That ain't
how I weld:  my face is right in there with 2 diopter lenses in my
mask.  

The experience of having a defib misfire has been variously described
as being hit by lightning and being kicked in the chest by a mule. I'd
rather skip that experience.  Welding is fun, being kicked in the
chest by a mule very probably isn't.        

I can't seem to get data on acceptable field strengths (E-field and H
or B field) that won't cause an ICD to malfunction.  I opined that
this is probably because the goddamned lawyers make this data highly
proprietary.  That was confirmed by the engineer (and friend) formerly
employed by a major mfr.  Goddamned lawyers.    

So I'm about SOL here, not being up for a mule kick in chest while
experimenting, candyass that I am.  

Helluvit is that I have no friends who can do TIG and MIG, though Karl
Townsend's son "the kid" may be a savior.  Neither of my sons are at
all interested.  One daughter is, and she's done some nice work with
MIG  but she lives in Brooklyn NY so she's not exactly local.

Mar, bless her hawrt, has volunteered that she might do a Vo-Tech
course in TIG and MIG.  She'd be a natural, that based on her
precision quilting and prowess with handgun, both hand-eyes
coordination activites.  TBD how that goes, but whatta teammate for
even considering it, eh?  Hey, she severely aced ground school for
pilot licence for previous hub in the bad old days. Highest score
they'd ever seen if I recall correctly.  What a fool he was for doing
her wrong, what good luck for me and eventually us. Goin' on 30 years
now and it just keeps getting better.      

Most folks are quite happily "weld free" in their dotages, right?
Still, it's a bit of a lump to be prohibited from practicing a skill
and activity I've enjoyed developing over decades and frequently find
useful in my shop.  Oh *** oh dear, poor me.

I intend to wallow in this for a while, *** you if you can't take a
joke.  I'm not happy about this, but it's no secret  that gettin' old
ain't for sissies.    

With all the intelligence and experience in this group someone might
know a way to use copper mesh in your welding clothes to create a
Faraday
Cage and attach a ground to absorb the harmfull rf. I imagine using a
signal strength tester might tell you if you're close to a solution.

dennis
in nca
.


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