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18th May 2019, 10:34 AM #61
Michael I'll admit to far worse. Built a bird aviary but had only tacked the door & hinge to frame, went in for lunch. Oldest son about 10 who it was built for was out soon after getting it ready for the birds. Door came off. Me only wearing shorts n t shirt no footwear, ventured out for 2 welds. Put new rod in lead was twisted it flung round hitting me right chest, yes welder on at 60 amps. Son reckoned I did the best jig he'd ever seen.
Prior lunch full safety gear was worn.
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18th May 2019, 10:46 AM #62
One matter to consider here is 40 years ago although those of us who went through Tech would have been pounded with safety guide lines. This however back at work was often due to long term practices without incident was sidelined.
In recent years due to OH&S we see some excellent changes, sadly its gone deyond sensibility in getting the job done.
Shortcuts are still out there, as I get older I try not get bolder but value digits etc etc even more.
Trying to explain to a text book OH&S fanatic that you can't spend $500k on a roll over jig for 2 upside down welds for a 40ft coach hypothetical of course.
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18th May 2019, 03:12 PM #63Most Valued Member
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It was stupidity using a ladder that put me in hospital with a severely broken elbow and a cracked pelvic girdle. Took 3 reasonably long operations to repair the elbow joint as much as possible, followed by nearly a year of physiotherapy to get me back to approx 60% of the function I had previously. Plus almost cost me my seagoing career.
One of the reasons I welded full pipe lifelines on my boat hull as early as feasible during the build.
PDW
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18th May 2019, 03:21 PM #64Pink 10EE owner
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I think they became liable since they are selling coffee to people in their cars. If people were buying coffee at a counter, then walking away into a car it would be a different situation. But your point is valid in that people should have been intelligent enough to not blame someone else when they spilt a hot liquid on themselves through entirely their own actions. Sadly a fair proportion of the population these days can not see danger any more.
Gold, the colour of choice for the discerning person.
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18th May 2019, 03:25 PM #65Most Valued Member
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18th May 2019, 05:22 PM #66Member: Blue and white apron brigade
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18th May 2019, 06:05 PM #67Most Valued Member
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I think the McD's coffee is a bit of a corner case. They were knowingly selling coffee that was at a high enough temperature to cause severe burns, to people who were drinking it in a moving vehicle. That was a recipe for accidents and there were lots of them.
Flip side the woman who held a scalding hot drink between the tops of her thighs was an idiot.
PDW
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19th May 2019, 03:58 AM #68
Supposedly pictures were shown on the Internet. I have seen them. Don't know if they were the correct persons as no face shown. The pictures were horrendous and would curtail a love life for a LLOONNGG time if not the rest of Ones life. I was not prepared for the scope of the damage and would not look again if I had the chance. No warning was given.
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19th May 2019, 09:25 AM #69Senior Member
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Usafe pocedures online, too many typos from phone users maybe?
Funny with the mention of 9" grinders over the page, a lot of sites down here, during all these endless induction courses you endure, they say they would frog march you off the premises if you had one in your possession, let alone using one!
Not one to watch redneck videos all that much, but there should be a fair few sobering shots of cutting discs embedded in various people's faces and body parts out there, if you're into gore.
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19th May 2019, 10:14 AM #70Most Valued Member
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19th May 2019, 10:40 AM #71Diamond Member
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I know the ADF and most other Fed Govt sites won't allow 9" grinders on site (for a couple of years now) due to safety concerns (generally the users competence) and the last manufacturing site I was at was the same for all their Aust/Asian sites (maybe not PNG).
I see plenty of unsafe work practices on YouTube that wouldn't cut it on a worksite. I've seen plenty of unsafe work practices on worksites that I'd never do at home or advise anyone else to do.
If your at home, it's up to you what you do. If your on site, it's up to the company, the worksite itself, you and your workmates to work safely or appropriately.
My last two worksites (Bunnings and Komatsu) where really big on OHS and probably needed to be.
Ben.
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19th May 2019, 10:44 AM #72Pink 10EE owner
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After the LNG export terminal build finished at Gladstone, they had auction after auction of stuff.
They had box after box after box, thousands and thousands of 5" dewalt angle grinders. You could buy a pallet sized box full of them for $100. Not a single larger angle grinder was seen. I got a couple off a reseller for $15 each. They are OK, but not like my Metabo 9".Gold, the colour of choice for the discerning person.
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19th May 2019, 06:32 PM #73Most Valued Member
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I recently used my 9" grinder to cut some old 4000 psi compressed air cylinders into pieces. Think 10mm wall thickness or more.
That job reminded me why I hated my 9" grinder. It's a necessary tool, but only for when a smaller grinder really won't do.
In hindsight I should have just drilled a hole and used the plasma cutter. I'm going to machine the ends square on the HBM anyway.
PDW
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19th May 2019, 06:53 PM #74Member: Blue and white apron brigade
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During a stock take at the mens shed it was found we had 5 9" grinders, none with guards and a couple hand no other handles either. I suggested they be disposed of but they were still there 12 months later. I also wanted a no metal bodied power tool policy (the ones we had were all pretty ancient) be kept at the shed but nothing happened about that either.
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19th May 2019, 08:28 PM #75Most Valued Member
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