Blueboatman
Well-Known Member
Dan, I'm afraid that the clue is in the brittle 'snap off' nature and indeed name of the blade . Hacksaws too don't like being pushed on much.
General tool safety:
Safety courses always emphasises which way the tool edge and your body bits will ' go' when something breaks, jams, sticks snaps or slips. This could be thw workpiece moving unexpectedly too ( so clamp it and dont wear slippy shoes on a slippy floor etc)
Which is why of course we don't wave loose hair or garments around routers, apply pressure to blunt chisels or those pointing at our other hand, put fingers infront of powertools, nor do we over-extend 'snapoff' blades and then apply them to sticky materials like polyethylene breadboards and then wiggle 'em, lever 'em and apply lots of pressure into the path of the likely snapped off, retained bit of embedded blade.
Unfortunately you have just learn all this by trial and error. The famous university of life.. Either way works.
Glad it is a timely and not protracted warning, and well done on the Heads Up. I think you should apply ' a' quantity of quality whisky internally to guard against possible infection, cheer up the patient and encourage 'alls well with the world' again !
I could tell you some good nailgun stories but possibly later eh?
General tool safety:
Safety courses always emphasises which way the tool edge and your body bits will ' go' when something breaks, jams, sticks snaps or slips. This could be thw workpiece moving unexpectedly too ( so clamp it and dont wear slippy shoes on a slippy floor etc)
Which is why of course we don't wave loose hair or garments around routers, apply pressure to blunt chisels or those pointing at our other hand, put fingers infront of powertools, nor do we over-extend 'snapoff' blades and then apply them to sticky materials like polyethylene breadboards and then wiggle 'em, lever 'em and apply lots of pressure into the path of the likely snapped off, retained bit of embedded blade.
Unfortunately you have just learn all this by trial and error. The famous university of life.. Either way works.
Glad it is a timely and not protracted warning, and well done on the Heads Up. I think you should apply ' a' quantity of quality whisky internally to guard against possible infection, cheer up the patient and encourage 'alls well with the world' again !
I could tell you some good nailgun stories but possibly later eh?
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