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Thread: Inattention punished
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10th January 2006, 09:19 PM #16
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10th January 2006, 10:05 PM #17
AlexS,
This photo has nothing to do with what Queenslanders feel about New South Welshmen
Rocker
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10th January 2006, 10:31 PM #18
Sorry to here of your misfortune Rocker!
Using dangerous machines is a lot like driving. The longer you do either your chances of a accident increases exponentially. You were VERY luck to get off so lightly.
Just use the experience as a learning tool to help you avoid future occurrence, another way of saying it's time to look at just how you do some things.
This is the reason my left thumb is ⅛" shorter than the right one.... BUT it hasn't got any shorter! I just changed the way I do stuff on the table saw.
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11th January 2006, 09:18 AM #19
Rocker,
I was horrified, mortified and every other fied to hear your news. Glad it wasn't worse, and that it happened (more or less) between projects!
The more I use my TS, the more I use my Grrrippers!
P
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11th January 2006, 09:32 AM #20
Hi Rocker,
I've been trying to avoid thinking about your accident (and some of the others posted here ) as it remains one of my nightmares. Its not through lack of sympathy, just a head in the sand approach! I hope you heal quickly and get back to work.
I use a tablesaw a heck of a lot, and one day it may come to bite me...as it has a couple of my students over the years. I tend to get way closer than the 100mm, and have loads of trouble with guards and extractor parts IN MY WAY! I don't remove them (well, maybe during some procedures...:eek: ) but seriously think they can cause trouble instead of saving it. Of course I use a push stick, but I'm not a fan of fingerboards either, so I my chances are getting higher.
I am very aware of the increased risk during repetitious cutting, when concentration can wander, but generally I approach the tablesaw with trepidation, even after 20 odd years.
BTW love your finger stall
Cheers,Andy Mac
Change is inevitable, growth is optional.
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11th January 2006, 09:44 AM #21
Sorry to hear about the mishap.
Did something actually go wrong, or did you simply feed your finger into the blade?
Best wishes for a full and speedy recovery.Those are my principles, and if you don't like them . . . well, I have others.
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11th January 2006, 09:49 AM #22
Hi Rocker,
My finger is aching in sympathy for yours . Nice ingenuity with the finger protector . Glad that woodwork is helping you forget the pain. A Grandfather clock - cool!!
Cheers and I hope your finger heals quickly.
Wendy
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11th January 2006, 06:19 PM #23Originally Posted by MajorPanic
I think it would be truer to say that the risk increases linearly, until you start adding senility into the equation (which is probably what happened in my case), and then it starts to be exponential. Anyway, this accident, and the news that a friend the same age as myself had a stroke recently, which left him unable to speak, have reminded me forcibly that I am by no means bullet-proof, and that I had better hurry up and make what pieces I can whilst I still can.
Midge,
Unfortunately, the piece of wood I was cutting had another bit of wood glued to it vertically, so I could not use my Grripper. I was hanging onto the vertical piece with my left hand; somehow, at the end of the cut, the offcut vertical piece seemed to twist unexpectedly and drew my left hand down onto the blade. The silly thing is that there was no necessity to use my left hand at all. The push-stick in my right hand should have been able to do the job. Anyway, I am just annoyed with myself for letting this happen. I am threatened with banishment from the shed for ever if it happens again, so from now on I shall do my utmost try and stay safe.
Meanwhile I am consoling myself by buying a spate of toys - ordered a 1/2" bevel chisel from Lie-Nielsen today. It will be used for clearing the waste between the tails of dovetails. Perhaps I should have got a 5/16" one too
Rocker
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11th January 2006, 08:06 PM #24
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11th January 2006, 08:45 PM #25Originally Posted by MajorPanic
Pay attention! Read post #15 I have got hold of about 0.08 cubic m of spectacular fiddleback blackwood for it, so I am hoping it should turn out well. But I am a bit miffed that the Veritas dovetail guide won't take stock thicker than 25 mm, whereas the pediment returns on which I have to cut tails are 29 mm thick*. I shall just have to revert to my home-made dovetail guide - the one I was cutting on the table saw to modify it when I had my accident. So my blood was not spilled entirely in vain.
Rocker
*Correction: The Veritas jig can be used on stock thicker than 25 mm, if you use your own clamp to hold it and put aside the clamp that comes with the jig.
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12th January 2006, 09:15 AM #26Originally Posted by Rocker
Sorry.Andy Mac
Change is inevitable, growth is optional.
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29th January 2006, 06:15 PM #27
Two weeks later
Here is a picture of my finger two weeks after the accident. It shows how very lucky I was not to have had a far worse injury. Now go and enjoy your dinner
Rocker
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29th January 2006, 07:41 PM #28
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29th January 2006, 08:43 PM #29Originally Posted by Rocker
Now go make something. A grandfather clock should do the trickBoring signature time again!
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29th January 2006, 09:24 PM #30
Can I have some crackling?
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