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What's the most dangerous tool in your workshop

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SillyOldDuffer07/05/2017 17:16:01
10668 forum posts
2415 photos

Dropping a hammer this morning got me thinking about the dangers in my workshop. Actually, apart from scratches and the odd near miss, Model Engineering for me has been very safe. Or am I living in a fool's paradise?

I think the single most dangerous tool I own is a woodworking table saw. On the metalwork side, I don't really trust the Grinding Wheel, and am careful not to burn the place down with a blowlamp. The lathe and milling machine are docile beasts, but I've had the pillar drill snatch a couple of times. The band-saw doesn't worry me at all compared with a Stanley Knife.

I'm of the opinion that straightforward precautions make home metal working very safe even compared with something like Amateur Radio where chaps fall off roofs. However, ignorance and over-confidence cause accidents and I may be guilty of both. What tool or process would you consider the most risky in an ME workshop?

Ta,

Dave

Gray6207/05/2017 17:26:57
1058 forum posts
16 photos

ME!

Nick_G07/05/2017 17:28:41
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1808 forum posts
744 photos

.

Blunt tools that shouldn't be so.

Nick

Antony Powell07/05/2017 17:30:34
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147 forum posts
19 photos

I once new a guy who ...

sliced down his thigh - cutting gaskets with a stanley knife

dance after dropping a 4 inch grinder between his feet whilst it was still running

shatter his thumb when he hit it with a hammer

badly gash his hand with a chainsaw (luck he didn't loose it, it was running)

have more car crashes than anyone deserved

And finally get sacked because he was a danger to everyone in the workshop especially himself !!

Tony

PS he was a nice guy outside work.

Journeyman07/05/2017 17:32:54
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1257 forum posts
264 photos

No tool is dangerous! If you leave them untouched they will do no harm at all. Unfortunately as soon as you pick something up or switch it on you have imediately turned it into potential agent of destruction devil

John

Mike E.07/05/2017 17:39:16
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217 forum posts
24 photos

The most dangerous tool is a brain that is tired. face 17

Mike Poole07/05/2017 17:52:23
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3676 forum posts
82 photos

We are the most dangerous element in the workshop, personal protection helps to stop many accidents doing harm but I believe an accident to be a very rare thing. As many of us teach ourselves to use workshop machinery we miss out on the old hand showing the safe way to do things so we will have the accidents that should never happen if shown the right way. I think the drilling machine has the reputation for most accidents. The picture of a finger and all tendons pulled out of the forearm on the table of a drill has stuck in my mind for 44 years and I never wear gloves when using powered machinery. The photo of a small drill stuck in the lens of a friends safety glasses will always remind me to wear them on an offhand grinder. I think some of the shock and horror pictures and stories do stick in the mind and help to work safely. I have only used a surface grinder once since I was an apprentice but it sticks in my mind to start the wheel before turning on the suds and tun the suds off before stopping the wheel. It is amazing how much a dry wheel can soak up which will put it out of balance and possibly cause a wheel failure. Maybe we should have a thread of horror stories of how not to do things.

Mike

richardandtracy07/05/2017 17:56:05
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943 forum posts
10 photos

The most dangerous tool in the workshop is me.

Especially using the metal lathe for wood & having a lathe tool snatched from my hand, spun round the work, breaking the handle and then the point embedded itself through the lower wall of twin wall PC roofing. And stayed there. No injury to anyone, but one heck of a scare.

Next for danger is the shaper. Loads of leverage, and moves slowly enough to seem safe to someone lulled into a false sense of security.

Then the woodworking mitre saw.

Regards

Richard.

An Other07/05/2017 18:25:57
327 forum posts
1 photos

hand-held circular saw, even with all its safety guards. I hit an unseen nail once in a (new) piece of timber, which somehow caused the saw to be flung back towards me. This happened so quickly that the spring loaded blade guard had no time to close over the blade before the damn thing cut a six inch gash across the top of my knee. almost to the bone. (six stitches) It went in the dustbin, and I won't use one at all now - stick to the saw table or do it by hand.

Matthew Reed07/05/2017 18:29:11
41 forum posts

I remember being told that the most dangerous item in a workshop was the clock: rushing things, not taking precautions, not thinking it through, running machines too quickly, or leaving things in a dangerous state, all because it needs to be done by a certain time. Perfectly safe equipment becomes dangerous when you are trying to get things done too quickly.

To be fair, I am completely unaware of time when I am in the workshop these days. Most troubling aspects is the "thought you were only going to be 20 minutes, I've did all the washing up two hours ago" comments when I return to the world.......

mike T07/05/2017 18:36:50
221 forum posts
1 photos

The band-saw.

Pushing hard by hand, to cut some thick stock, suddenly the blade is out the other side and there is no longer any resistance to your pushing. Ouch!

Brian Wood07/05/2017 18:37:05
2742 forum posts
39 photos

I have never used it because to me it was inviting disaster and probably serious injury and that was the ghastly horizontal table that was supplied with my metal cutting band saw. I shuddered when I saw it and scrapped it out of hand.

​My vote for the most dangerous tool is a lack of imagination.

Brian

Matthew Reed07/05/2017 18:57:07
41 forum posts

Putting things in perspective, probably the most dangerous thing in a typical old workshop was the ash tray. There will be far more deaths from smoking than machinery.

JA07/05/2017 19:09:48
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1605 forum posts
83 photos

Alcohol - I don't mean meths.

I won't work after a drink.

JA

John Reese07/05/2017 20:06:20
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1071 forum posts
Posted by Mike E. on 07/05/2017 17:39:16:

The most dangerous tool is a brain that is tired. face 17

True. Probably as dangerous as working drunk.

mark smith 2007/05/2017 20:25:09
682 forum posts
337 photos

I think all tools are dangerous if your unlucky or careless. I have a radial arm saw which are supposed to be notorious but never had a problem using it as yet.

Worse accident ive had was when i was using a handheld router and the cutter went across my thumb but no lasting damage.

Second worst a rotary tableblush. It was on a shelf next to a bandsaw , i left the bandsaw running ,whilst picking something off the floor and the rotary table fell off the shelf due to vibration onto my arm leaving a great big bruise.Luckily no break.

Jon Cameron07/05/2017 20:26:26
368 forum posts
122 photos
Posted by Graeme W on 07/05/2017 17:26:57:

ME!

That was going to be my answer laughI agree with points made above though, no tool is dangerous if used correctly and taking safety steps, for example using a blowlamp to solder a boiler, you wouldn't do it on a wooden bench, with oily rags around. And no heat proof gloves. Common sense needs to play a major part in what you do in a workshop.

Tractor man07/05/2017 21:17:07
426 forum posts
1 photos
I learned the art of knife Grinding on a 30 inch diameter 8 inch wide stone which I sat astride on a wooden "horsin" so that the wheel was a few inches below my most valued possessions. If you ever thought about the wheel bursting you would never sit there. The man who taught me had a stone burst into three large pieces,one flew up into the horsin and threw him off, one fell into the trow of water and the third ended up in the next door shop thru a new hole in the wall. Crikey.
Tractor man07/05/2017 21:20:24
426 forum posts
1 photos
All that recalling of Sheffield reminded me of old trade words that have now lapsed. One of my favourites was mousing, polishing a blade with a stone that made a smell like mouse wee. Time for a biting on before I do some cuckoo.
Windy07/05/2017 21:22:44
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910 forum posts
197 photos

An accident I saw when I first started work in the car trade made me cringe a work mate using a 7 inch sander before we started used the small air operated ones caught the edge of a panel wrong way.

Oops it kicked back then his arm artery was showing another compressing a suspensions spring in a machine got it wrong another hospital case.

Complacency and tiredness are things I've to be careful off it's easy to go down that route.

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