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In Reply to: RE:Are you willing to build it first? posted by Russ57 on August 20, 2014 at 10:04:07
Workbench safety has little or nothing to do with the integrity of the design. I read a primer on tech safety some years ago, but can't remember where. It included hints like keeping one hand in your pocket when working with live circuits and being careful around a chassis that isn't grounded.
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Buy Chinese. Bury freedom.
Follow Ups:
It has a lot to do with safety.
1) If I have you build something that I know darn well is going to blow up in your face I think that is a "safety" issuse.
2) If I have you build something that I know isn't going to work right, and make a newbie do a lot of trouble shooting, I think that is a "safety" issuse.
IMHO the best way to insure safety starts with a safely designed item. This is an area I am involved with in the work place. Good work habits go a long ways. Still I see really skilled guys get hurt bad by equipment that is so poorly designed and laid out that "it is an accident waiting to happen". We have seen our fair share of advice given here that would qualify as "stuff waiting to happen".
"...you build something that I know isn't going to work right, and make a newbie do a lot of trouble shooting, I think that is a "safety" issuse."
Sorry, makes no sense to me. The point to all this is to make the newbie an expert at safety. Then it doesn't matter how long he works on it.
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Buy Chinese. Bury freedom.
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