No guard, no handle, that is factual for various reasons, technique does not ****. There are different ways to introduce safety, it does not always have to be by the book and sometimes are more effective as long as it is conscientious and thought out. Following the book blindly can be dangerous too.
Thanks
mjac
You were wearing nylon athletic pants according to one of the early posts in this thread.
While “athletic pants” may in some cases be perfectly safe, generally “nylon ones aren’t, because many types of nylon fabrics are flammable, or meltable, and grinding creates sparks which can cause clothing to catch on fire, or melt, neither of which is pleasant, or safe.
If you want to wear “stretchy” “athletic pants”, while grinding, buy ones that are 100% cotton, or close yo it, and cut iff a piece of fabric from the cuff and do a burn test to make sure the fabric won’t melt of go up in flames.
There are also FR rated cotton sweat pants available that are treated specifically to prevent combustion.
As for removing the guards, (and the side handle), this is not necessarily safe, but the newer skinnier brushless grinders some manufacturers make, including Metabo, have a smaller diameter and would be easier to grip and maintain control of when being used in an awkward place without guards.
These grinders are also available with paddle switches, which would be even safer if you remove the safety guards.
Generally,
No safety system or component makes something inherently safe, or provides 100% safety, or even close.
Most user safety recommendations and usage instructions, also don’t provide 100% safety, but those instructions do help minimize injury or prevent injury in the case that something goes wrong.
Proper attire, and “grooming”, also helps prevent injury. (Ie. Long hair that can get grabbed by a grinder, and loose clothing that can as well).
Properly stored and safely aged grinding and cutting discs can also come into play, and may help prevent issues as well, along with having potential safety features built in, such as discs that get slightly thinner towards the center, to help prevent binding. (I forget who makes/made these discs).
If you follow the regular proper safety procedures, such as an angle grinder with a cutting guard, using the grinder with the discs cutting in the proper direction, preventing pinching of the cut material, having the cutting disc facing away from you while cutting, having a proper grip on the grinder, etc.,
You can use the shittiest discs imaginable, ones that might easily shatter, just with a little side loading, and there is likely a 99.9% chance you will not get injured making a cut, even with those ****** discs.
For all your claims about “knowing what you were doing”, everything you have said about what you were wearing, and how you were using the grinder, seems to indicate you don’t actually understand safe grinder use.
Grinder wheels spin around, so the linear direction one side is going, is going to be opposite to the linear direction of the opposite edge, a grinder guard can mostly prevent this
From being a safety issue, but if you remove the guard, then an errant touch on the wrong edge that is left exposed can cause the grinder to force itself in the opposite direction than what you might be expecting, and this is worse when cutting in an enclosed space, since the grinder can “bounce around”, like a pinball, once control is lost.
If you need better visibility in an enclosed space, maybe buy some mirror acrylic off cuts from a plastic supplier, and makeup mirrors for better view in the enclosed space.
Arbortech also makes a clear polycarbonate guard for use with their carbide tipped carving blade, and the guard is designed to be retrofittable to smaller grinders. The polycarbonate should be capable of protecting the user from a shattered wheel, and is designed do that cut depth can be limited.
It’s also fairly cheap as far as aftermarket guard cost goes.