major health and safety issue right there. Also stupid.
Amish work hard.
The guy is like 2 feet in the air. If it falls, he is going to go *** over teakettle, mess up his concrete job and everyone has a good laugh. Some people here need to lighten up...
That is a rare sight you don't see a lot these days -- a person actually working.Amish work hard. A neighbor 2 streets over had his roof done by them. They were up there 2 stories high on a steep pitch -- no harnesses.
I think the Amish believe that whatever happens is divine providence, so they don't worry much. But I do agree that looks very risky what the guy in the pic is doing.
The guy is like 2 feet in the air. If it falls, he is going to go *** over teakettle, mess up his concrete job and everyone has a good laugh. Some people here need to lighten up...
The guy is like 2 feet in the air. If it falls, he is going to go *** over teakettle, mess up his concrete job and everyone has a good laugh. Some people here need to lighten up...
Oh yeah? What about a hydraulic malfunction that drops him and then smashes him into the slab? He could easily die. We had a guy in a bridge inspection rig that malfunctioned and he ended up getting squished under the bridge and lost an eye. Sounds like you just don't know enough to spot a potentially life-threatening or dangerous situation. You NEVER ride equipment that was not meant to be ridden.
Sounds like you've never been to a rodeo. Life is all about taking risks, driving, flying, eating, and many other everyday normal things. People have died in all endeavors just living life.
A wise old guy told me one time, " Don't take life so seriously because your not going to get out alive."
lg
no neat sig line
This isn't about living. It's about working. A concrete slab is not worth dying over, lol. Dying doing something you love/a hobby (rodeo) or something necessary, like driving or flying, is totally different. Injuries doing stupid things with machinery are usually totally preventable, and this is a perfect example.
Feel free to act dumb on the job, though. Ride in an excavator bucket, run into an un-shored trench, don't lock out/tag out something and we'll hear about you on the news!
This isn't about living. It's about working. A concrete slab is not worth dying over, lol. Dying doing something you love/a hobby (rodeo) or something necessary, like driving or flying, is totally different. Injuries doing stupid things with machinery are usually totally preventable, and this is a perfect example.
Feel free to act dumb on the job, though. Ride in an excavator bucket, run into an un-shored trench, don't lock out/tag out something and we'll hear about you on the news!
Interesting pic, UFY; Unidentified Flying Yoder.
Now, safety wise? Perhaps not too smart. All he needed to lift was just a inch or two off the concrete, swing it off and on the ground.
You want to see safety issues? Look up heavy machinery fails in Asia. OMG! Fork lift holding a fork lift, with a ladder on the 2nd fork lift, with a guy at the top of the ladder. Excavators falling off trailers, and a bunch of guys in sandals trying to hold on to it and keep it from tipping, Hilarious.
As far as a hydraulic failure, telehandlers have load holding checks in the hydraulic system. If a hose, or connection, fails the load holding check valve closes and the boom stays where it is.
For the win!To all you singing gloom and doom over this picture; Have you ever given thought to how many BILLION of hydraulic cycles are completed successfully each day? Many of them could take a life if not successful. Some of the failures have taken lives but I believe that the odds are so low as not to be worth the thought.
lg
no neat sig line
