§ 1915.153 Eye and face protection.
(a) General requirements.
(1) The employer shall ensure that each affected employee uses appropriate eye or face protection where there are exposures to eye or face hazards caused by flying particles, molten metal, liquid chemicals, acid or caustic liquids, chemical gases or vapors, or potentially injurious light radiation.
(2) The employer shall ensure that each affected employee uses eye or face protection that provides side protection when there is a hazard from flying objects. Detachable side protectors (e.g., a clip-on or slide-on side shield) meeting the pertinent requirements of this section are acceptable.
(3) The employer shall ensure that each affected employee who wears prescription lenses while engaged in operations that involve eye hazards wears eye protection that incorporates the prescription in its design, unless the employee is protected by eye protection that can be worn over prescription lenses without disturbing the proper position of either the PPE or the prescription lenses.
(4) The employer shall ensure that each affected employee uses equipment with filter lenses that have a shade number that provides appropriate protection from injurious light radiation. Table I–1 is a listing of appropriate shade numbers for various operations. If filter lenses are used in goggles worn under a helmet which has a lens, the shade number of the lens in the helmet may be reduced so that the shade numbers of the two lenses will equal the value as shown in Table I–1, § 1915.153.
Table I–1—Filter Lenses for Protection Against Radiant Energy
Operations | Electrode size 1/32 in | Arc current | Minimum *
protective shade |
---|---|---|---|
Shielded metal arc welding | Less than 3
3–5 5–8 More than 8 |
Less than 60
60–160 160–250 250–550 |
7
8 10 11 |
Gas metal arc welding and flux cored arc welding | Less than 60
60–160 160–250 250–500 |
7
10 10 10 |
|
Gas Tungsten arc welding | Less than 50
50–150 150–500 |
8
8 10 |
|
Air carbon | (Light) | Less than 500 | 10 |
Arc cutting | (Heavy) | 500–1000 | 11 |
Plasma arc welding | Less than 20
20–100 100–400 400–800 |
6
8 10 11 |
|
Plasma arc cutting | (light) **
(medium) ** (heavy) ** |
Less than 300
300–400 400–800 |
8
9 10 |
Torch brazing | 3 | ||
Torch soldering | 2 | ||
Carbon arc welding | 14 |
Filter Lenses for Protection Against Radiant Energy
Operations | Plate thickness—inches | Plate thickness—mm | Minimum *
protective shade |
---|---|---|---|
Gas Welding: | |||
Light | Under 1/8 | Under 3.2 | 4 |
Medium | 1/8 to 1/2 | 3.2 to 12.7 | 5 |
Heavy | Over 1/2 | Over 12.7 | 6 |
Oxygen cutting: | |||
Light | Under 1 | Under 25 | 3 |
Medium | 1 to 6 | 25 to 150 | 4 |
Heavy | Over 6 | Over 150 | 5 |
(b) Criteria for protective eye and face devices.
(1) Protective eye and face protection devices must comply with any of the following consensus standards:
(i) ANSI/ISEA Z87.1–2010, Occupational and Educational Personal Eye and Face Protection Devices, incorporated by reference in § 1915.5;
(ii) ANSI Z87.1–2003, Occupational and Educational Personal Eye and Face Protection Devices, incorporated by reference in § 1915.5; or
(iii) ANSI Z87.1–1989 (R–1998), Practice for Occupational and Educational Eye and Face Protection, incorporated by reference in § 1915.5;
(2) Eye and face protection devices that the employer demonstrates are at least as effective as protective as eye and face protection devices that are constructed in accordance with one of the above consensus standards will be deemed to be in compliance with the requirements of this section.
[61 FR 26352, May 24, 1996,, as amended at 74 FR 46358, Sept. 9, 2009; 81 FR 16091, Mar. 25, 2016; 85 FR 8732, Feb. 18, 2020]