Former Member | 12/11/2018 16:49:09 |
1329 forum posts | [This posting has been removed] |
Thor 🇳🇴 | 12/11/2018 16:54:02 |
![]() 1766 forum posts 46 photos | Hi Bill, I made the same experience as you years ago so I try to clean up the sharp end of the bars before putting them back in the storage rack. Thor |
Merddyn's Dad | 12/11/2018 17:09:48 |
20 forum posts | Hi Bill, Many years ago I got a reprimand from my manager for wasting mine and company time. It was my habit to deburr or chamfer the ends of all metal bars, usually steel but also brass and Lt Alloy before they were placed on the storage racks in the stores. So, I stopped, until later one individual gashed his hand bad enough to require hospital treatment, this was before the days of PPE. I had a different working relationship with the manager after that. Steve |
Robbo | 12/11/2018 17:18:57 |
1504 forum posts 142 photos | Bill The 60 year old scar on my thumb reminds me to always clean up rough ends |
Peter G. Shaw | 12/11/2018 17:29:15 |
![]() 1531 forum posts 44 photos | Yes, just to take off the sharp edges Peter G. Shaw |
Mick B1 | 12/11/2018 17:44:59 |
2444 forum posts 139 photos | Not so much to avoid risk of cuts - don't think I've ever cut myself that way - but to ensure a clean, true grip in the chuck, I deburr and usually chamfer the back end too. |
Chris Gunn | 12/11/2018 17:55:39 |
459 forum posts 28 photos | Not only do I clean the burrs off, I use a white correcting pen marker and mark the ends with the size so I can find the right size easy next time. Chris Gunn |
Boiler Bri | 12/11/2018 18:52:52 |
![]() 856 forum posts 212 photos |
Your Elf n safety says all cut ends should be cleaned to prevent damage to fingers. Its a bit like a small offcut of round bar on the floor, you just dont do it. 46 years ago my boss boll(£;: me off for doing these things and you remember not to do it - if you dont your stupid 🤔 Well thats what he told me 😂 Bri |
larry phelan 1 | 12/11/2018 19:20:26 |
1346 forum posts 15 photos | Only takes a moment to do it,result ? no more gashed fingers.! Yes,I always clean up cut ends,the damage they can do has to be seen to be believed [been there,done that,but not any longer ! ] Try it,you get used to it ! |
Jon Lawes | 12/11/2018 19:25:34 |
![]() 1078 forum posts | I don't, but I will now. |
Pete Rimmer | 12/11/2018 19:46:31 |
1486 forum posts 105 photos | I find that stainless can pull up a nasty burr. A quick swipe with a file gets it gone though. |
ChrisH | 12/11/2018 20:09:02 |
1023 forum posts 30 photos | I bought a bench mounted belt sander - the type with a longish belt in the front usually vertical and a circular disc on the side - and mounted it on the end of the bench. Now every piece of stock I cut, and the remaining bit, gets a (very) quick dress up on the belt to take the sharp edge off, as does any stock I buy if it arrives with a sharp edge. I say 'a (very) quick dress up' because that's all it takes, literally seconds, but it drastically reduces the chance of a cut hand. So a no-brainer. The bits I mill have the edges dressed with a file, as do any circular ends on lathe produced parts unless a chamfer has been put on, but I guess most folks would do that anyway as a matter of course. Saves cuts to hands! I also mark each end of the bar stock with the EN number and the size to help ID it later when I have forgotten what I do have with a Sharpie, takes the guesswork out later. It helps me anyway! |
Jon | 12/11/2018 21:04:48 |
1001 forum posts 49 photos | Never it wastes needless time. |
thaiguzzi | 13/11/2018 04:38:30 |
![]() 704 forum posts 131 photos | Don't bother on alloy. But steel and S/S - chamfer or deburr before it goes back in the rack. |
John MC | 13/11/2018 07:36:52 |
![]() 464 forum posts 72 photos | I don't bother, its a bit like cleaning the machine after every session, life's too short........ The nearest I've seen "industry" bothering to do this was a rough chamfering of bar stock to go in to an autofeed for a capstan. |
Mark Rand | 13/11/2018 09:23:31 |
1505 forum posts 56 photos | I tend to go the other way, I normally use gloves when handling lengths of stock. Most of my steel stock retains the layer of cruddy oil on it from when it came from the stock holder and it is grubby stuff to handle. I also find that square and rectangular lengths of cold rolled steel can cut. So until I've band sawed off the length I want to work on and wiped it off, I tend to try to remember to keep my bare pinkies off it. |
Ian S C | 13/11/2018 10:02:53 |
![]() 7468 forum posts 230 photos | You might as well do it while it's still in the lathe, you'll have to do it at the beginning of the next job, and that time might be wasted, it's going to happen some time. Ian S C |
JOHN MOSLEY 1 | 13/11/2018 10:57:07 |
10 forum posts | You will find all people who did there apprenticeships' in the 60/70s do take any sharp edges of anything they touch. We did not use gloves then. I remember only too well an older engineer coming up to me and saying did you machine this, I proudly said yes. This was followed by a verbal and physical assault on me saying take the beep beep burs off next time. |
mechman48 | 13/11/2018 11:17:26 |
![]() 2947 forum posts 468 photos | Posted by Ian S C on 13/11/2018 10:02:53:
You might as well do it while it's still in the lathe, you'll have to do it at the beginning of the next job, and that time might be wasted, it's going to happen some time. Ian S C +1 - I tend to face off the end & put a light chamfer on... then ready to spot / centre drill on next job. |
Mark Rand | 13/11/2018 11:25:18 |
1505 forum posts 56 photos | Certainly debur or chamfer parts after machining or before if needed. But lengths of stock put back on the rack after sawing get the gloves. |
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