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Safety rules

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paredown

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 12, 2012
Messages
544
Location
Pomona, NY
Ladders, fatigue and steel toed boots.

Ladders: I am much more careful about where and how I set ladders before use. Got a double-side step for working on electrical; quality stepladders for high work. Get someone to brace the ladder if possible. Low stuff, use a drywall bench; and I recently purchased a small Baker style rolling scaffold.

Fatigue--as I age, I make a concerted effort to do the hard stuff while I'm fresh. I will only run the chain saw first thing, and I borrowed someone else's rule--one tank of gas and done.

Steel toed boots with good soles--always on construction sited, heavy yardwork days etc.

Saws--yep--be ultra-careful--same goes for any cutting tool. Put punch presses on the top of the list.
 

gtae07

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Joined
Mar 6, 2015
Messages
2,962
Location
Fayetteville, GA
Two small mistakes and stop the project till another day before a big one happens.
Yeah, I'm developing a better sense of when to stop before the mistakes start compounding.
I will only drink once the work is done & everything is cleaned up.
My rule used to be that beer is for cleanup only.

Then I realized that I never brought beer into the shop anyway, and I almost never get a chance to clean up (I almost always get interrupted before I intended to finish). So now it's just no beer. I just wait till dinner, or take a couple down to the pool.
 

RPH

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Joined
Dec 17, 2006
Messages
4,190
Location
Michigan Thumb
It’s live until you prove otherwise.
This refers to check for energized/unenergized systems. I don’t trust others when told it’s dead. Too many stories of the wrong circuit being cutoff.
Two things I always checked was meter operation before testing systems. One bad lead can cause your demise.
 

JohnC1957

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 19, 2022
Messages
84
This seems to be a good place to ask a question. Can anyone recommend safety goggles that fit over glasses ?
 

engineer2

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Joined
Dec 13, 2009
Messages
11,795
Location
Chicago burbs
I read this here many years ago:
When the beers come out, the power tools get put away.

In our younger days we used to drink beer while working on cars. Not anymore.
Pull a short block? Two people, a length of chain, and a driveshaft.
 

geoffro5

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 5, 2012
Messages
61
Location
Canberra Australia
Two of mine:

Wear proper PPE every time. No safety squints for grinding that'll only take a few seconds. That includes proper respiratory gear, too.

Stay in the shop to perform a fire watch for 30 minutes after any hot work. It's a good time to clean the place up.
Two very good points. I always worry about fire after welding, after it happened to me years ago, luckily put it out. My grandfather told me to never put my finger where I wouldn’t put my pecker.
 

paredown

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Joined
Jan 12, 2012
Messages
544
Location
Pomona, NY
The DeWalt goggles in post #41 fit over my glasses very well.
Thanks--I'll try them out. I wear eye protection less than I should because most choices are painful to wear.

I'm really annoyed with the change in materials/straps on the 3M cartridge respirators--I could wear my old one (that the straps disintegrated on) for hours at a time when necessary. The replacement puts too much pressure on the bridge of my nose and I can barely wear it. Grrrr..
 

DGersic

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Joined
Mar 12, 2017
Messages
6,274
Location
DeKalb, IL
Thanks--I'll try them out. I wear eye protection less than I should because most choices are painful to wear.

I'm really annoyed with the change in materials/straps on the 3M cartridge respirators--I could wear my old one (that the straps disintegrated on) for hours at a time when necessary. The replacement puts too much pressure on the bridge of my nose and I can barely wear it. Grrrr..

Most eye protection ***** if you wear glasses. I also wasn’t using as much as I should. What bothered me most was the sides, These have relief areas on the sides to keep pressure off the temples. They also have a good anti-fog setup.

I haven‘t noticed a change in the straps. I recently replaced my 3M respirator, and they seem fine to me. Maybe just loosen the upper ones a bit. If I have them too tight, they do hurt at the bridge.
 

ATC

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Joined
May 12, 2012
Messages
8,261
Location
VA
Brought? Hell….thats where it lives!!

Yup! Mini-fridge right by the door in the garage. I thought I was in a virtual AA meeting while reading through some of the replies. LoL
I get more done in the shop when I have a couple beers to sip on. A case of beer will last me over 6 months, so it's not like I have to have it.
 

liliysdad

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 18, 2008
Messages
5,378
Yup! Mini-fridge right by the door in the garage. I thought I was in a virtual AA meeting while reading through some of the replies. LoL
I get more done in the shop when I have a couple beers to sip on. A case of beer will last me over 6 months, so it's not like I have to have it.

I have learned that, in the world of GJ, there is nothing that exists between zero beers and slobbering, cut your pecker off with a jigsaw drunk.
 
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A

atch

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 4, 2006
Messages
842
Location
Columbia, Missouri
I wear these for just about anything I do with power tools around the house. A friend almost lost an eye because he did not.


818AeSmnm2L._AC_SL1500_.jpg

Are those DPG82?

Just curious to see if they are the same thing I have on order.

Yes. They are very comfy too. Well, as comfy as possible for safety glasses.

Mine just arrived. I haven't been to the shop with them yet but they feel like they will protect a LOT better than the safety glasses I have been wearing.

I've never had a serious eye injury but it's not uncommon for me to get fine sawdust in my eyes even with safety glasses.
 
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rharman

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Joined
Apr 22, 2012
Messages
8,741
Location
SoCal
I had an incident the other day that taught me a lesson.

Was putting a very slight bow in a hinge pin to add some tension to the door. Had two deep sockets on one vise jaw, the pin resting against them, and a third deep socket in the center on the other vise jaw. Snug it up and watch the pin bend.

Once it started to bend, the ends of the pin angled out and one of the two sockets went flying - boom! Scared the **** out of me - and, worse, my wife was standing there to add another pair of hands. If that had injured her, I'd just have to kill myself. I was pretty shaken the rest of the day.

Fortunately, no one was hurt. Never thought about that potential but it could have been very bad. Should have had eye protection and covered the assembly with a rag to contain it.

Big lesson learned.

Here's the configuration for clarity...

1713060859029.png
 

MerlinsBeard

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 27, 2020
Messages
397
Location
MD
Thanks--I'll try them out. I wear eye protection less than I should because most choices are painful to wear.

I'm really annoyed with the change in materials/straps on the 3M cartridge respirators--I could wear my old one (that the straps disintegrated on) for hours at a time when necessary. The replacement puts too much pressure on the bridge of my nose and I can barely wear it. Grrrr..
I don't have the Dewalt, but I do like the NoCry UltraShield Pro. Fits my glasses fairly well and feels pretty comfortable so far. Still waiting to see what happens when it's hot and humid.
 

paredown

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 12, 2012
Messages
544
Location
Pomona, NY
I use a full face shield. I never found a set of goggles that fit over my glasses comfortably without fogging up.

Yes--I'm using one of those in the shop. It was a lucky acquisition that came with my "new" set of woodworking tools that a friend whose husband passed decided I should have... It is less useful than goggles for some of the stuff that I get involved with, but fine for upright shopwork...
 

GaryM909

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Joined
Apr 11, 2016
Messages
1,516
Location
Calgary, Alberta, Canada
I generally have the proper PPE when mucking around in the garage whether welding or wood working. My rule is to not use junk tools or consumables. Tools slipping or breaking and grinding discs flying apart will hurt you.
 

Houdini5150

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 17, 2022
Messages
566
Location
Arizona
whenever I use jack stands, I always give the car a good little shake...

A new one for me is to tie my hair up and back out of the way so it does not get caught in stuff... The long hair is a newer thing for me in the past 5 years since I started doing stuff at home and on cars again... I did not tie it up and I ran it over with my creeper... Since then I keep it up, god forbid I lean my head over a running engine.....
 

zendriver

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Joined
Dec 10, 2014
Messages
29,748
Location
Indiana
Always been mine (and now official company regulation)

When driving, if you have the right-of-way and taking it causes an accident, that may have otherwise be avoided (by not taking it), then you are stupid (and now in trouble with the Company).
 

PCustoms

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 23, 2011
Messages
22,349
Location
VT
I caught myself today...

I thought about safety glasses before grabbing the skillsaw. After the first cut, I thought about them again, out the saw down and went and grabbed them from the shelf above the sink.

2 thoughts is my limit, if I ignore the 2nd one I'm bound to get dust in my eyes.
 

Mike65

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Joined
Mar 7, 2007
Messages
3,028
Location
Horse Pasture, Va.
Never operate any power tool/garden tool if you are tired, wait for the spinning blade to stop before reaching near it for ANY reason & no loose clothing to get caught in said power tools.
 

STClurker

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Joined
Mar 8, 2008
Messages
2,083
Location
st. cloud, MN
it probably sounds silly compared to the rest of these, but I hate an open utility knife... pick it up, open it, use it, CLOSE IT.

I have an irrational fear of reaching on the bench and grabbing the business end and getting cut
 

DGersic

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 12, 2017
Messages
6,274
Location
DeKalb, IL
Update:

See post #41, #43, and #60 above.

I've been using these DPG82 goggles for quite a while now and they work/feel great.

Mine are pretty well worn at this point. I had to replace the head strap, it lost its elasticity. I had another head strap from something, maybe an old head lamp, that got repurposed. The goggles are still going strong, and I’ll definitely replace them with another pair when they die.
 
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A

atch

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Joined
Apr 4, 2006
Messages
842
Location
Columbia, Missouri
I knew a machinist many years ago that had a very long beard that he kept braided like a ponytail. Any time that he was going to use a lathe or drill press he tucked it into his shirt so as to eliminate the possibility of getting it caught.
 

PCustoms

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Joined
Jul 23, 2011
Messages
22,349
Location
VT
it probably sounds silly compared to the rest of these, but I hate an open utility knife... pick it up, open it, use it, CLOSE IT.

Major peeve of mine when I'm working near someone and they put an open knife down.

Frankly I'm shocked we still allowed them at work. 99% of the time it's just cutting tape to open a box.
 

johnre

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 1, 2016
Messages
1,043
Location
Portland, OR
Any sheet metal drilling is never done hand-held.

ER physician next door told me once that the accident rate for drill presses is higher than the rate for table saws, although the severity is usually less - typically from what he sees on the most severe accidents, a table saw will sever whole fingers or even parts of hands, whereas a drill press lacerates tendons down to the bone. Either way, though, it’s not going to be a good day for you.

So if drilling sheet metal on my drill press, I put it in a vise and with larger bits I also quick clamp it down (so the bit doesn’t **** it up clear of the jaws and throw the piece as it breaks through the material - another lesson I learned one day). If hand drilling, I put it on the floor on top of junk plywood and stand on it, using both feet if at all possible.
 
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LOW1

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Joined
Jul 20, 2018
Messages
2,635
Location
ontario
Never assume that the guy who wired your building read the same DIY wiring book that you did. Or any wiring book for that matter
 
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