A New Way to Injure Yourself

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A New Way to Injure Yourself

Home Forums 3D Printers and 3D Printing A New Way to Injure Yourself

Viewing 25 posts - 1 through 25 (of 34 total)
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  • #329571
    Neil Wyatt
    Moderator
      @neilwyatt

      I was using a large screwdriver to lever off/scrape away support material from the inside of what is planned to be a guitar effects box.

      Going back to my STL and looking properly I discover that on the version I printed has a gap where the first version had an internal wall. All well and good as the battery lead has to go through the gap.

      The downside was when I used a fair degree of force to try and lever the fill off the non-existent wall.

      I now have a remarkably accurate reproduction of the palm injury reported in another thread.

      Ow.

      Neil

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      #31550
      Neil Wyatt
      Moderator
        @neilwyatt
        #329607
        Samsaranda
        Participant
          @samsaranda

          They say lathes and milling machines are dangerous and need to be careful, my nemesis is a screwdriver, any screwdriver and it's amazing how much I can damage myself.

          DaveW

          #329614
          Mike Poole
          Participant
            @mikepoole82104

            I managed to pierce the web between thumb and index finger, it is quite interesting watching the nurse fishing about with a pair of tweezers for what turned out to be just an oily bit of me.

            Mike

            #329644
            Samsaranda
            Participant
              @samsaranda

              Sounds painful Mike, probably too much information.

              Dave W

              #329648
              roy entwistle
              Participant
                @royentwistle24699

                Tools should be used for what hey where designed for

                Roy devil

                #329663
                Colin Heseltine
                Participant
                  @colinheseltine48622

                  Many years ago an acquaintance of mine, who was an apprentice at a local garage, was using a screwdriver two handed to persuade a rubber boot to locate on the grease cup on the rear suspension arm of an early mini. As he moved the screwdriver to the front of the boot as was to be expected it slipped out of boot and thence into his eyeball. Cue loss of one eye. Whenever I did the same job I used to use a crotchet hook, nice rounded end and the hook to catch on the inside of the rubber boot.

                  Colin

                  #329673
                  Rainbows
                  Participant
                    @rainbows

                    I did a similar thing but I used a scalpel rather than a screwdriver for my print fettling. Should of bought the sterile blade option

                    #329683
                    Robin
                    Participant
                      @robin

                      I drove a scraper through my finger on Sunday trying to separate print from support. Annoying because I bought a chain mail glove last time this happened but that seems to be living in the kitchen dont know

                      #329691
                      Chris Trice
                      Participant
                        @christrice43267

                        My weapon of choice is stabbing myself (usually fingers) with rat tail files.

                        #329712
                        john carruthers
                        Participant
                          @johncarruthers46255

                          70's classic screwdriver horror stories…
                          The govenor of a local joinery works employed his son, he got odd jobs to do.
                          One such was screwing the threaded table leg plates to a small coffee table.
                          Instead of putting the table face down and inserting the 16 – 3/4" screws with his big Stanley pump driver, he held it on the floor, legs down and pumped upwards.
                          When the driver slipped it pierced beneath his jaw, went through his tongue and burried itself in his soft palate.
                          Pain was induced.
                          We maneged to unclip the bit from the driver and took him to A&E (only 300 yards from the works).
                          The same chap later joined the paras, was medic-ed out after standing behind a recoiless gun :-/

                          #329713
                          Clive Hartland
                          Participant
                            @clivehartland94829

                            Like the senior NCO who was putting grease into a track tension device and as he sat with his foot under the track it rolled forward over his foot. It took two of us using crowbars to roll it back off his foot.

                            #329717
                            Ady1
                            Participant
                              @ady1

                              Some people should spend their lives doing office work

                              Reg Prescott is my favourite

                              #329730
                              Mike
                              Participant
                                @mike89748

                                Back in the 1970s my mother was secretary to an engineering business, and the first-aider was on the stores counter. He kept his big first aid tin on a high shelf. When an apprentice suffered a tiny cut, he went to the stores to get it dressed. The first-aider reached up, slipped, and the first aid tin fell and hit him corner-first on the head. He finished up in hospital, while my mum gave the apprentice a bit of elastoplast she kept in her handbag.

                                #329733
                                Mike Poole
                                Participant
                                  @mikepoole82104
                                  Posted by john carruthers on 29/11/2017 08:37:40:

                                  70's classic screwdriver horror stories…
                                  The govenor of a local joinery works employed his son, he got odd jobs to do.
                                  One such was screwing the threaded table leg plates to a small coffee table.
                                  Instead of putting the table face down and inserting the 16 – 3/4" screws with his big Stanley pump driver, he held it on the floor, legs down and pumped upwards.
                                  When the driver slipped it pierced beneath his jaw, went through his tongue and burried itself in his soft palate.
                                  Pain was induced.
                                  We maneged to unclip the bit from the driver and took him to A&E (only 300 yards from the works).
                                  The same chap later joined the paras, was medic-ed out after standing behind a recoiless gun :-/

                                  A colleagues father managed a similar trick but it went up his nose, I always have that thought when I pick up my Yankee but that is not often these days with the convenience of battery powered screw drivers.

                                  Mike

                                  #329742
                                  richardandtracy
                                  Participant
                                    @richardandtracy

                                    Strangely enough, since getting my lathe I've tended to have fewer injuries. The obvious danger of the lathe has made me more careful, and this has affected all my efforts in the workshop.

                                    But generally flat bladed screwdrivers are the most dangerous tool in there. Going to Pozidriv and wearing out & not replacing my flat bladed screwdrivers has helped a lot, though.

                                    Regards,

                                    Richard.

                                    #329743
                                    Hopper
                                    Participant
                                      @hopper
                                      Posted by Samsaranda on 28/11/2017 16:36:22:

                                      They say lathes and milling machines are dangerous and need to be careful, my nemesis is a screwdriver, any screwdriver and it's amazing how much I can damage myself.

                                      DaveW

                                      I remember the metalwork teacher at highschool telling us the screwdriver was the most dangerous thing in the shop and he had seem more injuries from them than from anything else. Stories in here so far seem to bear that out. Ouch.

                                      #329867
                                      Howard Lewis
                                      Participant
                                        @howardlewis46836

                                        My usual jibe at Elf and Safety is that they don't have doors on the office to avoid trapping fingers, and are not allowed to use pencils or pens for fear of stabbing themselves.

                                        Apparently, where I used to work, the H & S manager's office is within the main H &S one, and has NO door!

                                        Heeding the warnings of my woodwork master at school (MANY years ago) try to keep hands behind anything sharp or dangerous Note the word TRY.

                                        Guess who sharpened a pencil, and then promptly stabbed himself with it? (Still have a dark spot on the finger)

                                        Let him that is without sin, cast the first stone!

                                        (Must learn to type, and/or proof read)

                                        Howard

                                        Edited By Howard Lewis on 30/11/2017 11:33:53

                                        #329875
                                        Mike
                                        Participant
                                          @mike89748

                                          In my stupid youth I was walking around my uncle's very large garden with an escaped young chicken in one hand and a machete in the other. I'd just finished tidying one of the wilder corners. When I got to the high fence around the chicken pen I chucked the wrong thing up in the air. The machete, being heavier than the chicken, came straight down (fortunately blunt edge first) and hit me on the head. I got a split scalp, but not as bad as it might have been. Probably explains some of the more stupid decisions I made in later life…………

                                          #329888
                                          Neil Wyatt
                                          Moderator
                                            @neilwyatt
                                            Posted by Mike on 30/11/2017 11:59:25:

                                            In my stupid youth I was walking around my uncle's very large garden with an escaped young chicken in one hand and a machete in the other. I'd just finished tidying one of the wilder corners. When I got to the high fence around the chicken pen I chucked the wrong thing up in the air. The machete, being heavier than the chicken, came straight down (fortunately blunt edge first) and hit me on the head. I got a split scalp, but not as bad as it might have been. Probably explains some of the more stupid decisions I made in later life…………

                                            Well that proves chickens are cleverer than humans

                                            #329904
                                            Clive Hartland
                                            Participant
                                              @clivehartland94829

                                              Two shooting stories, my friend and armourer carried a .22 pistol in his jacket pocket for personal protection as he was in Kenya. After work he would on the drive home call in to a bar to have a beer and buy enough for the evening at home. Hanging his jacket on a chair back it slipped off and fell to the floor and the gun went off and the .22 bullet went into his ankle!

                                              Mine is when I went to the range, I had .44 Magnum which I reloaded lead bullets for. It had been raining and the grooves in the sand from previous shots had filled with water. One of my shots hit the water ricocheted off the water and hit the wall and came straight back at me, hitting me in the chest and leaving a large bruise. I saw it coming all the way from 25 yards. You can say I was very careful from then on to clear such puddles in the sand.

                                              #329925
                                              An Other
                                              Participant
                                                @another21905

                                                Years ago I was warned not to pick my nose while driving, due to the possible consequences in the event of an accident! the thought makes me cringe.

                                                #329930
                                                Brian H
                                                Participant
                                                  @brianh50089

                                                  On a first aid course a few years ago the experienced ambulance driver warned against sucking hard boiled sweets whilst driving; the reason being that in the event of an abrupt halt, the person stays strapped in but the sweet carries on knocking out the teeth!

                                                  It really put me off!

                                                  Brian

                                                  #329954
                                                  Chris Gill
                                                  Participant
                                                    @chrisgill22114

                                                    My favourite claim to stupidity involved a 14lb sledge hammer and a washing line. Unfortunately, I only remembered the washing line when I was face down on the lawn with a bruise on the back of my head. Didn't do that again

                                                    #329956
                                                    nigel jones 5
                                                    Participant
                                                      @nigeljones5
                                                      Posted by Chris Gill on 30/11/2017 20:17:14:

                                                      My favourite claim to stupidity involved a 14lb sledge hammer and a washing line. Unfortunately, I only remembered the washing line when I was face down on the lawn with a bruise on the back of my head. Didn't do that again

                                                      My dear departed father, a builder, placed his sledge hammer at head height on a part build wall. It pivoted on its axis and knocked him out clean. If you can imagind an egg stuck onto the side of your head this is what the resulting swelling looked like – never seen anything like it.

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