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#31
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Re: Reflective Safety Glasses
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This. Enough said. Also you could blame us for this |
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#32
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Re: Reflective Safety Glasses
I am assuming that Lockheed Martin mailed every team they sponsored 30 pairs of blue tinted safety glasses again this year. A number of safety advisors asked about them but it was nothing more than an inquiry. Several students including our driver prefer clear lenses anyway.
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#33
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Re: Reflective Safety Glasses
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FRC's guidelines on the matter: Quote: Wear ANSI-approved, UL Listed, or CSA rated non-shaded safety glasses. Lightly tinted Rose, Blue, Amber tints are FIRST approved, but reflective lenses are not (eyes must be clearly visible to others). Blue tinted are FIRST approved...this should not be a problem |
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#34
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Re: Reflective Safety Glasses
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That leads me to believe that the safety manual is intended as a set of recommendations rather than requirements.1 Note that elsewhere in the competition manual, FIRST has certain explicit safety requirements that are independent of the safety manual. I consider this distinction to be perfectly reasonable: there are some safety-related things which FIRST might like (for entirely valid reasons) which are infeasible to demand, and there are some safety-related things which need to be demanded in order to promote an acceptable level of risk. By the same token, I realize that event staff have the power and duty to make the competition reasonably safe, and that if they choose to implement the safety manual recommendations, they may be justified in doing so. In that case, they need to realize that they are acting on their own initiative, rather than implementing a mandatory FIRST directive. 1 I realize that given the conflicting use of terms, that this could be interpreted in other ways. I think this one is the most reasonable, given the text and its source (the competition manual), but this isn't a case where the proper interpretation is necessarily obvious. |
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#35
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Re: Reflective Safety Glasses
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For that matter when grinding you should be wearing glasses and a face shield or goggles that seal tightly to the face. NO ONE FOLLOWS THIS AT EVENTS! Quote:
I wear Oakley Radars with a clear lens occansionallyto the shop and evants, I originally got an array of lenses for biking, all Oakley lenses meet or exceed all safety requirements for ANSI impact testing, but only the "sports" glasses typically meet the side shield requirements. |
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#36
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Re: Reflective Safety Glasses
My understanding as a mentor is to prepare these teens to what it's like in the real world. No place I've worked that require safety glass would allow anything other than #1 tint.
Also, when purchasing prescription safety glasses, you cannot get anything other than #1 tint. When I replace my last set of glasses, I asked to have the old pair tinted darker for sunglasses, like I did a few years ago with my non-safety glasses, and because of liability, they would not do it. |
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#37
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Re: Reflective Safety Glasses
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Part of my mentor training was to teach these students what they will see in an actual machine shop environment. Sometimes things suck, like real life. Safety rules are not ambiguous. |
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#38
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Re: Reflective Safety Glasses
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If you've worked in the real world for any amount of time, fair is not a word that is often used or enforced. 27 years in industrial/factory maintenance, and I've never been hurt other than a scratch, and I've never seen ridiculous safety rules. |
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#39
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Re: Reflective Safety Glasses
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#40
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Re: Reflective Safety Glasses
Much depends on degree. You see someone playing with light sabers in the pits, do something right now. Some one walking around with tinted glasses, roll yours eyes.
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#41
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Re: Reflective Safety Glasses
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At most events I've been to, the safety advisors rarely make it out to the field. This makes sense, as the pits are a far more dangerous environment than the field. The field is also very closely monitored by many of FIRST's best trained volunteers, so they don't require supervision by a safety advisor to remain safe for those nearby. Secondly, the description of the Safety Advisor role puts a lot of emphasis on coaching teams in proper safety procedures. While volunteers should not be and are not exempt from safety rules, the general assumption is that volunteers are aware of them and follow them. If you do see volunteers violating the safety rules and guidelines, then you should either politely inform the volunteer or tell a safety advisor to do so if you do not feel comfortable approaching the volunteer. |
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#42
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Re: Reflective Safety Glasses
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It is typically the colors listed that are used for contrast enhancement, color correction, and/or glare reduction in an indoor setting as well. Adding gray to the list would be useful - UVEX, for instance, has a gray lens that still allows 80% of visible light to pass, while reducing the amount of transmitted IR. |
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#43
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Re: Reflective Safety Glasses
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We were more than happy to wait and talk with the team while he went and got his safety glasses and the discussion carried on from there. Moral of the story: the student spoke up to a judge, politely but firmly insisted that he get his glasses, the team got additional time talking to the judging team, the judging team went away impressed with both the robot and the team's professionalism, and afterwards I went and tracked down a safety advisor to put in a good word for the team. So, no. While there are times in life when it appropriate to keep your mouth shut, at an FRC event you should always -- politely -- feel free to advocate for FRC principles. If you see someone with inappropriate safety glasses, you can politely mention it to them, offer to loan them a pair of approved glasses, or -- if you are uncomfortable with that -- bring it to the attention of a safety advisor. If that upsets anyone, it's them that is doing it wrong... not you. Jason |
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#44
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Re: Reflective Safety Glasses
You should notify a mentor and let them deal with it, just as in real life, you report safety violations to your boss, manager, supervisor.
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