Hi all,
We manufacture a carbon product that we sell solely to steel manufacturers, for years we have supplied MSDS sheets that were translated from our parent company, by whom I have no idea.
We produce our product by mixing carbon/graphite with various, cements, silicas, zirconias and phenolic resins, obviously controls are in place for all the materials we use and everything is COSHH assessed for internal safety regulations.
The mixed material form a "batch of our material" for which we dont have an MSDS for, and this is my first query, as our "mixed" batch is a collection of ingredients, should we not have a requirement to produce our own internal MSDS based on those ingredients, and carry out COSHH based on that MSDS? If so, where would I start with this, would it be a case of sending a sample of our "mix" to a lab for analysis to allow the production of the MSDS?
Once the powders are mixed, they are bonded with the resin and form a hard/solid product which is fired to basically get rid of any volatiles.
Customers are asking for the MSDS of our "mixed" material, which has no bearing on their safety as its a solid when it arrives to their site as a product, the product we supply does not produce a dust unless they are cutting it, which is not normal, the product is simply used in molten steel and disposed of.
Does anyone have any advice on what we should be providing the customer, I feel MSDS is powder, liquid etc as opposed to a solid that doesn't pose a risk as it is, obviously hit it with a hammer, it goes in your eye...
Any advice greatly appreciated, I think customers are maybe using this method to find out exactly what goes into the product, which is a highly guarded secret between competitors, and unfortunately, I can't get hold of competitor information to see how they are managing.