ALB
Established Member
Just a quick story.
I am a radiographer, and had an interesting patient yesterday, a man who had an incident involving a lathe. He mounted a piece of wood, turned the lathe on to find it was turned up to its maximum speed of about 3000rpm. Said piece of wood immediately flew off and hit him right between the eyes as he was standing in front of it. Knocked him out cold, multiple fractures to his nose and maxilla (the bone that forms the cheek and lower margin of the eye socket). Big mess, lots of blood. Made for an interesting little conversation while I performed his CT scan.
This chap was lucky not to lose an eye, or suffer a traumatic brain injury. I'm sure he's learned his lesson, but it's one of those very neat illustrations of why safety rules are what they are.
Anyway, I'm sure I'm preaching to the crowd but be safe!
I am a radiographer, and had an interesting patient yesterday, a man who had an incident involving a lathe. He mounted a piece of wood, turned the lathe on to find it was turned up to its maximum speed of about 3000rpm. Said piece of wood immediately flew off and hit him right between the eyes as he was standing in front of it. Knocked him out cold, multiple fractures to his nose and maxilla (the bone that forms the cheek and lower margin of the eye socket). Big mess, lots of blood. Made for an interesting little conversation while I performed his CT scan.
This chap was lucky not to lose an eye, or suffer a traumatic brain injury. I'm sure he's learned his lesson, but it's one of those very neat illustrations of why safety rules are what they are.
Anyway, I'm sure I'm preaching to the crowd but be safe!