DavidR8 wrote:Holy smokes, those Phillips lenses are expensive!
They're really nice lenses, and they know it.
Spartan wrote:Hmmm. I dunno. I like being able to see the arc. It's a great indicator of what's happening, but perhaps more importantly what's about to happen. But that lens may be the greatest thing ever. Guess I'd have to try it out before judging it.
Well, what we'd call "seeing the arc" I'd say is a bit subjective. For instance, I had a person pm about these lenses, and I mentioned that in this helmet, I can see the plasma cone just as plain as day while I hold an arc. It's in color, a beautiful blue cone-shaped haze emitted from the nozzle. Stuff I have never seen in other helmets. The actual arc itself, it's still visible, but in most helmets it's damn near the only thing you can see because it's so bright (relative to everything else). Using that Phillips filter, the majority of that light wavelength is removed, and it's so clear I can actually see if there's contamination on the tungsten while I'm welding.
That's using a Furic cup which is about all I use now.
Those filters can be put into an auto-dimming helmet if you can get a size to fit and if they left enough room in the mount to add an additional lens (thickness). I bought a spare of the Super Magenta filters to do just that, but my Hobart Pro helmet won't allow it to fit, so it sits on the shelf like many other things. I've wanted to pick up an additional helmet that'll use a 2x4 lens so I can set that up for darker shade work when I do higher amp work. But I do it so seldom above 150A I just haven't bothered.
It took me about 10 seconds with one of these a friend brought to let me try, till I decided I was buying one. Funny story, he works for a pharma company and his company bought it. I asked, "how much was that helmet?" and he replied, oh, around $75. I thought, wow, I'ma gonna buy a half dozen of them! Yea... The HELMET was $75...
Lenses? Uh, they were more'n $75