head clansman
Established Member
hi digit
arghh not good mate was it your own machine .hc
arghh not good mate was it your own machine .hc
head clansman":1vrv2xhr said:just as long as there some form of guard on it is all that really matters protect those digits
p111dom":1na8xiqu said:How many people have cut a finger because they reached for an off cut under the assumption that the blade had stopped?
OPJ":nqgan7o8 said:p111dom":nqgan7o8 said:How many people have cut a finger because they reached for an off cut under the assumption that the blade had stopped?
You only have to look at Steve Maskery's Xcalibur saw for a good example of bad modern guard design. Credit to Steve though for producing several alternative improvements. :wink:
There's a basic rule here that I always adhere to and that's to never retrieve anything from the saw until the blade has stopped spinning. Same with a router, you never ever remove it from a cut until the bit has stopped (not so much a H&S issue, rather one of spoiling the job, but the same principal) - Robp111dom":jj09i8r3 said:How many people have cut a finger because they reached for an off cut under the assumption that the blade had stopped?
ivan":1ojd35i1 said:At work, if practice is lax and HSE inspection infrequent, just wait till there's an accident. With insurance cover invalidated, an employee's injury claim and the resulting court fine has often resulted in the owner loosing most of his personal assets.
Finial":1y0zpmf4 said:Rich and Kityuser are right, health and safety at work law only applies to the work situation, but that includes self-employed people carrying on businesses in home workshops. If you are not selling your work it does not apply to you.
wizer":vnzrf3ie said:also really curios as to who thought it was illegal to use a dado blade. Might see a UKW member on 'UK's Most Dangerous Criminals' soon.... "if you see this person, do not approach them, they may have a dado in their garage"
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