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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Oct 2017
    Location
    W.Pennsylvania, USA
    Posts
    2

    Default Goggles and karma

    This is a brief description of a recent experience to remind people like me what happens when karma bites your butt.

    I'd worked many years in the power industry. Even though an office worker, trips to manufacturing and test sites meant lectures and strict adherence to simple and basic safety rules. No open toed shoes, wear goggles, know where the emergency power shutoff is, stay in marked aisles, don't get under heavy bits, etc. Motivation was clear as injuries from flouting rules could be crippling, fatal, sometimes even embarassing.

    Now I've retired and I'm my own safety officer. Of course I screwed up around the time covid was heating up. Just a little bit of grinding and using a cutoff wheel without goggles. I'd assumed my glasses would protect my eyes. They'd always done so. Nope. I suffered from a day of eye irritation before deciding to visit expensive professionals to remove bits of grit from one eye.

    An emergency room person numbed my eye, poked around with a sharp thingie all the while saying to keep my focus still and unmoving or I'd have a worse injurie. She sounded irritated. Then to an opthamalogist for mopping up. More numbed eye, more sharp things and then a buffer; smooth out the rough spots? Better attitude though and more reassuring.

    Anyway, no damage done, only a few days dealing with eye irritation and many dollars spent unneccesarily.

    Regards,
    P

  2. #2
    BobL is offline Member: Blue and white apron brigade
    Join Date
    Feb 2006
    Location
    Perth
    Posts
    7,182

    Default

    Good reminder.

    Table below from a 1996 Vic study on DIY injuries.
    VISS presentations = hospital emergency presentations
    VISS Admissions - admitted into hospitals
    Those ladders have something to answer for - or least the users of the ladders?
    DIYAccidents.jpg

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Jan 2004
    Location
    Mackay North Qld
    Posts
    6,446

    Default

    Hi guyf2000

    Welcome to our MetalWork forums.

    Angle grinders create a draught in which metal and rust particles are picked up and can find themselves on the wrong side of safety glasses and face sheilds.Or alternately particles can be find their way into our hair and later be dislodged into our eyes. I have had both happen in 50 year career in Metalfabrication.

    The safety glasses prevents the high speed direct impact to the eye surface.

    Even with glasses and face sheild it is still possible to have a FB lodged in your eye.


    To explore the other areas of our forum here's a guide on how to to navigate our Forum and find all the other forums and help pages.

    Goto the FORUM box in the top left hand corner of the page and click the down arrow. This will bring up a pull down menu that has Forum Home at the top

    Click Forum Home which will present a scroll down page entitled Forums and members help.
    Our rules, the Terms of Service are right at the top ,we encourage you read them.

    Below that are all the various help pages and subforums that make up our MetalWork forum.

    Perhaps you may like to visit our Welcome Wagon Forum where you can fully introduce yourself and tells us about aspects of your metalwork hobby. Its in the scroll down sheet as described above.



    We look forward to your questions and contributions of knowledge to the Forum.

    Grahame

  4. #4
    BobL is offline Member: Blue and white apron brigade
    Join Date
    Feb 2006
    Location
    Perth
    Posts
    7,182

    Default

    I have several pairs of goggles in my shed but I prefer to use a full face shield like this one.

    The photo shows a custom made thin kerf cutting saw and metal dust extraction (red arrow) that catches most of the sparks coming off the top of the wheel.
    I have lifted the guard (plastic shield and Al angle arm) and held it in place with a small plastic spring clamp so the sparks that escape the dust collection can be seen.
    The vast majority of the sparks are squirted under the saw table into a baked bean can. That can gets real hot when extended cutting takes place.

    Bullseye.jpg

  5. #5
    Join Date
    May 2020
    Location
    Wisconsin, US
    Age
    40
    Posts
    13

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by BobL View Post
    I have several pairs of goggles in my shed but I prefer to use a full face shield like this one.

    The photo shows a custom made thin kerf cutting saw and metal dust extraction (red arrow) that catches most of the sparks coming off the top of the wheel.
    I have lifted the guard (plastic shield and Al angle arm) and held it in place with a small plastic spring clamp so the sparks that escape the dust collection can be seen.
    The vast majority of the sparks are squirted under the saw table into a baked bean can. That can gets real hot when extended cutting takes place.

    Bullseye.jpg
    Whenever I am grinding I prefer a full face shield such as yours. You never know what can happen if you use just the googles. A burnt lip, a scar somewhere on the face and etc. The worst case scenario is if a metal piece breaks off or a grinding stone breaks and a piece flies to the face or the neck. You can never be too safe so it is always good to put on safety gear. It is also somewhat of a civic duty too.. but not to get into such talks. But just to say my opinion. If you are safe and healthy than the doctors have more time to help those that got hurt by no fault of their own..

  6. #6
    Join Date
    May 2013
    Location
    Rockhampton, QLD
    Age
    68
    Posts
    454

    Default

    Welcome to the forum.

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