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Your cart is empty.The Heavy Duty Welding Blanket, 6x4ft Silicone Coated Fiberglass Fire Blanket is an excellent investment for welders, metalworkers, and anyone working in environments with potential fire hazards. It provides great heat resistance, durability, and ample coverage, making it ideal for both professional and home use. While it has a few minor drawbacks in terms of flexibility and initial stiffness, the overall quality and protective performance make it a solid choice for anyone looking for a reliable welding blanket. If you need a robust, long-lasting option to protect your workspace or equipment from heat and sparks, this blanket is highly recommended. This welding tarp has a good weight and protects surfaces from sparks and hot metal.
Aziz
Reviewed in Canada on March 20, 2025
Returned immediately. Does not worth even one star.
D M Smith
Reviewed in the United States on April 5, 2025
This looks nice, but handling it without gloves is like juggling some cactus.I have to deduct two stars because I got poked so many times, and still have little bits of fiberglass embedded in my fingers.And one star because of the poorly sewn edge with the exposed fiberglass.While the surface is nice and smooth, the edges are only folded once before being sewn, so there is exposed fiberglass sticking out all along near the edges, and also around most of the grommets.This is a little stiffer than the un-coated variety, it does not drape as well when placed over something to protect it from the welding sparks. The stiffness causes it to stand up a bit more and not cover as well near the bottom.This would be better when hung as a protective curtain.The biggest issue is the silicone coating has a lot of static electricity and this causes a lot of short bits of fiberglass to stick to the surface. These bits tend to stand up due to the static and when you touch it they get embedded in your skin almost instantly.Every time I touched this without gloves I got poked more than once.A corner just brushed my arm when unfolding it and my arm got poked multiple times.I spent over an hour looking through a surgical microscope to dig one particularly nasty bit out of a finger, I got most of it, but a shard is still in there.I was able to use tape and glue to get most of the other bits out.I have not figured out what to do with this yet, I don't want it in my shop until all the little fiberglass bits are gone, and I don't know how to get rid of the bits.I may try and hang it outside and let mother nature and the rain take care of the little bits.I don't know if this will work or not, I tried to wipe it down with a wet rag and that didn't get rid of anything, but somehow contaminated the rag with fiberglass.
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