|
|
|
![]() |
|
|||||||
|
||||||||
![]() |
|
|
Thread Tools | Rate Thread | Display Modes |
|
|
|
#1
|
|||||
|
|||||
|
Re: safety glasses
I have a slightly different take on the safety glasses: I wear a belt pouch for them. When I'm not wearing them, they're in the pouch (or on the table in front of me).
Said belt pouch may or may not also be able to hold a small container of hand sanitizer. |
|
#2
|
|||
|
|||
|
Re: safety glasses
I wear prescription classes and there is no way I can function with another piece of plastic on my face. So I went out and purchased official safety glasses and had my prescription added to the lens.
After looking at 4 local stores, I got my new prescription safety glasses this year from phillips-safety.com. They have a number of different styles at a reasonable price. The only exception I'll make is when using a DeWalt router to hand cut aluminum. Then I'll put on the chem lab glasses over my prescription glasses, because when I use that tool, I end up covered in aluminum and the extra safety in my opinion is needed. Dave |
|
#3
|
||||
|
||||
|
Re: safety glasses
I think there is a bigger question here... why the resistance to wearing safety glasses?
Ok...Ive done this myself... your trying to line up to drill a critical hole and you have to lift your crappy safety glasses out of the way to see clearly... when I caught myself doing that I knew it was time to get new goggles. So I still buy and wear crappy goggles, I just replace them more often, and take more care when putting them down. I even sewed up a nifty goggle sock to put them in. I am now of the "set it and forget it" mode, where I put them on walking into the venue, and take them off when I leave. (if I remember to take them off that is.) I have volunteered as safety at a few events, and nothing bothers me more than hearing officials say things like, "don't worry about your safety goggles, its the end of the day, if you are leaving then just leave." Or, " just go to your pit and put on safety goggles, these ones at the goggle stand are for visitors." Yeah... so if you are representing a team, just treat them like part of your uniform. Edoga |
|
#4
|
|||
|
|||
|
Re: safety glasses
Quote:
As for those with prescription glasses, I found some safety glasses at Home Depot (or was it Lowe's) that are made to fit directly over them rather than the curved ones that usually hit the frame of the normal glasses. I've used them and love them. I've considered getting myself a pair of prescription safety glasses from work, but apparently that would take up my annual lens benefit, something I'm not willing to give up. (Driving in the dark is more important to me than a few hours of being uncomfortable.) |
|
#5
|
||||
|
||||
|
Re: safety glasses
I started mine a week or so ago. You come to the meeting, you put on your safety goggles... keep em on all day and take them off when you leave... creating the habit.
|
|
#6
|
|||
|
|||
|
Re: safety glasses
I'm obviously not familiar with anyone's financial situation, but I purchased a pair of prescription safety glasses without using my vision benefits (so I don't use up the one pair of lenses I get per year). I got it without the reading correction that I normally have on my glasses (the optometrist said that for what I was using them for, it was unneeded. Most of the time I agree with him....except when trying to read the manual!). It only cost me about $250 all in. Not a horrible investment IMO. And yes, I've left events and totally forgotten that I have them on. I'm careful to put my regular glasses in the case that I took the safety glasses out of and throw it back in my bag.
|
|
#7
|
|||
|
|||
|
Re: safety glasses
Quote:
We solved the first by ending the communal safety glasses box (we still have some team glasses on hand for visitors and the occasional student who needs to borrow a pair) and instead making each student responsible for their own pair. That mostly solved the second issue as well - with the communal safety glasses, one or two careless students could scratch up all the safety glasses - now they only really affect their own safety glasses. Once each student was responsible for their own pair, we were able to get appropriate safety glasses for all of them - simple ones for those who don't wear glasses, and two OTG styles (visitor specs, plus small ones for the smaller students). This helped immensely with the third issue. |
|
#8
|
|||||
|
|||||
|
Re: safety glasses
We largely did the same last year. Each student and mentor is issued a pair of safety glasses with the 3946 logo, either small or "over glasses" as appropriate. I'm wearing mine in my WAI; you can see the logo below my right eye (left in photo). We bought a bunch so replacements are fairly cheap. We still keep a plastic sheet of pockets (I think it's intended to hold shoes) on the wall of the workshop, just inside the main door, full of our old safety glasses for those who lose/forget their own.
|
![]() |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | Rate This Thread |
|
|