hidden pixel

Eye Protection Information

Eye protection is protective gear for the eyes, which comes in many types depending upon the threat that is to be reduced. The threats can be particles, light, wind blast, heat, sea spray or some type of ball or puck used in sports. Eye protection was invented on November 2, 1880 by P.Johnson.[1]

Contents

Goggles

Main article: Goggles

Goggles are forms of protective eyewear that usually enclose or protect the eye area in order to prevent particulates, infectious fluids, or chemicals from striking the eyes. For example, when swimming, goggles protect the eyes against water.

Protection against light

The human eye is sensitive to intense light because it damages the retina and can even blind the individual. There are many different types of eye protection against light suited for different applications.

The most common forms of eye protection against light are sunglasses. These primarily protect against UV light from the sun and help increase visibility in bright conditions. They often tend to be fashionable as well as a practical. Laser protection eyewear is similar but will filter out a particular (or small range of) wavelength(s), customised to the laser being viewed. Laser protection eyewear is particularly important because of the extremely high intensity of laser light.

Welding glass protects against glare and flying sparks. Its a more extreme implementation of the same idea as sunglasses, suited to the more intense light generated during welding. Grade 14 welding glass (which is much stronger than sunglasses) can also be used to stare directly at the sun (i.e. to view a solar eclipse). Arc welding goggles must be much darker than blowtorch goggles.

Other protection

Helmets and visors

Some helmets and visors also protect the eyes:

Pricing

Prices depend on the manufacturing cost, quality, wavelength protection, and type of goggle/lens and may range from US$20 for a single lens to thousands of dollars for a set of specialized goggles.

Gallery

See also

References

  1. ^ Vipersafetyinc, Initials. (2010). http://www.vipersafetyinc.com/history-safety-glasses History of safety glasses].

External links

Categories: Eye | Protective gear

 

The above information uses material from Wikipedia and is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
Some facts may not have been fully verified for accuracy. [Disclaimers]
This page was last archived by our server on Wed Dec 21 13:26:56 2011.
Displaying this page or its contents does not use any Wikimedia Foundation's resources.
The owners of this site proudly support the Wikimedia Foundation.