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Thread: Toddlers and Power Tools
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23rd November 2011, 08:14 PM #16
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24th November 2011, 07:21 AM #17
To get back to the original question, if your access to your workshop is by a normal door, quickest and cheapest solution immediately is to get one of those childrens safety gates that are usually installed in homes nears stairs etc, whack it up, by doing this your child can still see what you are doing , being interactive with each other verbally but piece of mind you have created a safe barrier untill such time as you can install the safety breaker switch and if you still intend, infared beam alarms system.
And as every body has said in one way or another, be very vigiliant with tools and electricity, sorry if this sounds like a lecture but from personal experience, it really hurts when you get bitten by a tool, i also have 7year old twins, so you can imagine my dramas when the little buggers come in poking their nose around, dad, whats this do, whats that do dad, but seriously, all the best dude, sometimes kids have to learn the hard way, a fact of life.
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28th November 2011, 06:32 AM #18
My workshop is part of a 2.5 car garage. One car still lives inside (not for much longer if I can help it ). So the kids (5 and 3) walk through it each day to the car.
I have a locked door to the garage, with the deadlock up high so the kids can't reach it (also serves as security for the house if someone gets into the garage). Plus I use an isolation switch for all the circuits in the garage, except the lights. It goes on when I'm working, and off when I leave.
It's not just tools though that are dangerous. Piles of timber, paints/turps and other chems, chisels, planes, hammers, even clamps are all dangerous if they fall etc. I don't like kids in the shed with me when I'm working (in fact, I don't like anyone else there, but kids especially) - noise, dust, projectiles, etc. If I do, it would be for a special project that we are working on together, not just because they drifted in to see what I was doing.
Kids can make anything dangerous - climb on the thinking chair and all of a sudden they can reach all sorts of interesting things. My paints and other chems are locked away in a cupboard, but even still, the trouble they could create in 1.5 seconds is simply not worth the risk.
TravSome days we are the flies; some days we are the windscreen
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28th November 2011, 07:33 AM #19GOLD MEMBER
- Join Date
- Mar 2008
- Location
- Townsville, Nth Qld
- Posts
- 102
Totally agree with Trav. Well done!
regards,
Dengy
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