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machine shop horror stories
anybody have any stories of people getting hurt while machining?
any flying chuck keys blinding people, fingers sucked into mills and grinders, etc etc? |
Re: machine shop horror stories
Or long hair pulling heads into spinning chucks?
No, no horror stories. We Take Care Here. |
Re: machine shop horror stories
I was once machining 1/4" polycarb on an open CNC router, I think at about 6k RPM. I was cutting out a pocket about 4"x6" square. Forgot to put in screws to hold down the scrap piece. When it finished the cut, the endmill grabbed it and flung it 40 feet across the shop so fast I didn't even see it go. I felt the wind off of it as it flew by. Lucky that's all I felt. It was completely shattered when I found it. Polycarb, shattered.
Be careful out there... |
Re: machine shop horror stories
I remember about 3 years ago(I was a Freshman at the time), and I was drilling into a piece of diamond plate. Being a Freshman at the time, and not to bright in the machining sense; I didn't use anything to lock the plate down. To add to this initial dilemma, I unknowingly was drilling a bit too hard into the plate, and ultimately the plate got stuck in the bit, causing the plate to spin with the bit, resulting in my hands getting badly cut.
Fortunately, it has been a few years since my last machining accident and I always let incoming freshmen and members of my past ignorances. |
Re: machine shop horror stories
Not a machine shop per say...
I work for an aircraft engine manufacturer, pictures have been circulating around the office this week of an incdent that happened at an air field where a mechanic trying to save his hat got sucked into an engine on wing. I WILL NOT share these pictures, it is worse than you imagine. |
Re: machine shop horror stories
Luckily our team has been basically devoid of serious injuries, but there is one former student turned mentor who practically needs to be followed around with a first aid kit for all the minor cuts, scratches, and burns he manages to give himself. I will not give his name as a courtesy.
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Re: machine shop horror stories
Also not a shop, but I was patching the floor pan in my jeep. Cut a piece of sheet metal and was holding it with pliers. Turned to grab gloves (good for welding) and caught the back of my hand on the freshly sharpened edge. Lets say I could see parts of my hand I shouldn't have been able to see.
I have a good 3 inch scar going from the middle of my and to the first knuckle of my index finger. Probably should have gotten stitches, instead dumped rubbing alcohol on the cut used a few butterfly band-aids as well as plenty of medical tape and went back to welding. |
Re: machine shop horror stories
When I was taking a shop class in college, the lathes were back to back in rows. I was just lucky enough to drop something on the floor (tool or drawing). As I bent to pick it up, the guy at the lathe in the next row turned it on with the chuck handle in place. It went flying overhead where my head and upper body had been. I am alive today because I can't hold onto things. (They don't let me climb towers either.) Needless to say, that guy failed the class.
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Re: machine shop horror stories
I was taking a shop class at a community college, and we were all tramming in mill heads. Somebody turned on the mill to move the sweep bar to the other side (you're supposed to just grab it and swing it). 18" long sweep bar... gauge on the end... spinning at whatever the mill was set to. This lasted a couple of seconds at the most before somebody got to the power switch, but the damage was done.
Nobody got hurt, but the gauge was ruined, and the student didn't come back after that, whether by his own choice or by the instructor's I don't know. I found the needle at the near end of the shop; I think the glass or part of it was near the chip bin near where I'd been a few minutes earlier. |
Re: machine shop horror stories
It was in woodshop, and someone (I don't remember who) was sanding a piece of wood on an oscillating vertical sander, when it caught and was flung into the top of a nearby band-saw. Thankfully the band-saw had a large upper structure so the wood hit only it - and not any person. But it was Loud.
Now, in Robotics, there haven't been any serious incidents, just the usual scrapes. Ironically, First Aid is in the cutting drawer... |
Re: machine shop horror stories
Well... No serious injuries... But I busted my knuckle open with a wrench while doing some lathe work. Did I get a band-aid? Hahaha no. I just kept wiping the blood on my pants. I really wanted to get that part done!
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Re: machine shop horror stories
We've had a girl get her fingers broken in a gearbox.
There was another story (not on our team), either last year or the year before, where a girl got her hair caught in a machine, managed to not get her face pulled in because her hand got pulled in first. She tried to pull her hair out with her hand, which got pulled into the machine with her hair and she lost most of her fingers. |
Re: machine shop horror stories
Someone, somewhere was filing down an good sized chunk of metal on a belt sander-like device and lost his grip sending the part about 15 feet across the room missing his son's head by about half a foot.
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Re: machine shop horror stories
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Way way back at the dawn of time when our team was young... (10 years ago) We got to build in the machine shop at the Land Machines Division of Brown & Root. AND they let us use their nice lathes and mills. With those nifty speedy chuck keys and everything. Then there was the day we all heard a gigantic bang from the lathe area. High speed flying chuck keys are terrifying and loud when they hit the wall. But that wasn't what got use restricted to spring loaded safety keys. It was the second time the key was left in the lathe and (luckily) stayed in long enough to be violently slammed into the ways and visibly bent. So yeah, everyone please remember that lathes are one of the most dangerous machine tools you'll encounter. And keep your hand on the chuck key whenever it's in the chuck. If you never let it go till it's out of the chuck, it's stupendously less likely to take flight.
Unrelated to FRC, but we recently had a close call at my workplace. A welding positioner about the size of the attached photo was being anchored to the concrete when one of the anchors failed and the whole thing fell forward, narrowly missing one of our shop hands. Obviously an extremely serious incident and we're making some changes around the shop to prevent any reoccurrences. So any of you working in industrial shops, do remember to be wary of the big machines around you. |
Re: machine shop horror stories
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