wushaw
Elite Member
Something cheap to try...put light on the subject, a halogen light on a tripod will work.
Speedglass,Lincon,Miller all have good helmets. Stay away from cheapos. In my experience the higher the amps the darker the shade I run.Any of the settings 9-13 are safe. Try to focus your vision on the puddle and not the arc. As I have gotten older I have to wear glasses when welding close . If you can't see good you can't weld good.They make magnifiers for the hoods if this is the case.
Bill
Bright sunlight at your back will "blind" you due to reflection from inside the helmet. Its best if the only light getting to your eyes is coming thru the lens.Interesting, as I have the same problem with my three year old Optiva welding helmet. Even on the lightest setting, I can't see a blessed thing........ even welding outdoors in bright sunlight. Before I strike an arc, its no problem....... but when it darkens, it is waaaay too dark. I hate to spend another couple hundred on a second shield........ but too often my welds go off track due to the fact that I can't see what the heck I'm doing.