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#23
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05-25-2024, 08:48 PM
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Re: Worker Gets Both His Arms Crushed by Hydraulic Press
I see they basically all fucked off looking for torniquets instead of ripping off their shirts to turn into bandages, along with no belts to stem the flow. Running around like chickens on speed without any clue whatsoever. |
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#25
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05-26-2024, 01:01 AM
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| My Rank: FIRST LIEUTENANT Poster Rank:238 Join Date: Apr 2010 Posts: 5,940 Mentioned: 4 Post(s) Quoted: 873 Post(s)
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Re: Worker Gets Both His Arms Crushed by Hydraulic Press
I cant believe this happened in 2024 when in 1936 at the Ford Motor Company the big hydraulic presses tha were used to make the body parts of automobiles had two electric switches for each hand that workers had to press in order for the pedal to lower the press, thus avoiding that any limb was under the press when it was lowered. |
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#26
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05-26-2024, 01:02 AM
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| My Rank: FIRST LIEUTENANT Poster Rank:238 Join Date: Apr 2010 Posts: 5,940 Mentioned: 4 Post(s) Quoted: 873 Post(s)
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Re: Worker Gets Both His Arms Crushed by Hydraulic Press
That's nothing dude, the guy forgot to take his arms out of under the press. |
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#29
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05-26-2024, 04:08 PM
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Re: Worker Gets Both His Arms Crushed by Hydraulic Press
Most of the metal presses I have seen run continuously and are fed by coiled steel rolls. The operators monitor the process, remove stamped product and feed new coils of steel. So you typically wouldn't want to require the operator to keep pressing switches to run the press. I haven't seen big automotive or appliance panels being made, maybe they still load those one by one...
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