rhncue said:I believe the louder and shakier a machine is, the safer it is. When people operate a table saw or skill saw they seem to be very careful as they are aware that they can be dangerous and all the noise and saw dust flying around keeps the operators on their toes. The power tool in the shop that scares me the most is a band saw. It is so quite and timid looking that you can get careless around it and I have. For many years I did meat cutting and a band saw has no trouble with flesh and bone.
I've never mentioned this on a forum I don't believe but I have a brother one year younger than me. When he was 20 years old he worked with a printing press and one day he was cleaning a spot off of one of the ink rollers with a solvent rag. Simple operation done everyday in printing companies but this time the rag got caught. He didn't just lose a finger or a hand but both his arms were removed at the shoulders. Someone cut his shirt collar with a knife as it was cutting thru his neck as it went between the rollers. He has now spent the last 40 years with no arms and lucky to be alive over doing something simple on a machine that, if not respected, can be deadly.
Dick
One of the reasons I don't want to build cues. I'm fascinated by it all, have a father with enough woods to last 20 years and a kiln as well. Machines by and large just scare me anymore. I used to work in a slate factory that made wood slates for blinds. Was a slate saw operator and catcher. The catchers job was to pull the slates through 10 side by side circular saw blades, and keep scrapes from going back into the saw. I was watching someone else do it one day, and realized just how close I had come to losing some fingers. One of my buddies cut off the tip of his finger in a blink of a eye on the top cutters before they had spun down. They had a sanding machine that I had started on, had a press roller at the feeder end with a rope power cut off if you got caught. The girl that replaced me on that machine didn't respect it and got her fingers under the press, rolled them flat. God I can still hear her screams as the emt's removed the pressure from the press.
I just have too many concentration issues to work with machines that can maim you easily, which is why I just stick to computers.