Now I\'m downright paranoid.
Some one posted this link <A target="_blank" HREF=http://www.cdc.gov/niosh/injury/traumamcface.html>http://www.cdc.gov/niosh/injury/traumamcface.html</A> and it chilled me to the bone. I read these stories for three days. Not because I'm morbid or anything but because I kept recognizing situations in which I had probably been seconds away from a lot of these accidents myself - and didn't even know it.
Reading this put me in an ultra paranoid state and caused me to feel slightly uncomfortable the next time I was around the tractor. Reading this also caused me to reflect and and then talk about this to some of my farmer type friends. I never got to the second story before they rebutted with a story about someone they knew. A couple of ones I even remember the accident being on the local news. I once heard that farmers are in the same insurance category as test pilots.
I made several observations:
1) These accidents were numerous with many having very similiar circumstances, only dealt with fatalities-not the vastly greater number of injuries and only the investigated fatalities at that!
2) As a kid, I severely underestimated the danger presented by a rotating PTO shaft.
3) None of the tractor accident victims seemed to be wearing a seatbelt.
4)A large proportion of the accidents were witnessed by close family members.
5) A lot of the dangerous maneuvers were habitual.
Virtually every story left a moral or a point for me to try to incorporate in my routine. I have occasionally started my '51 JD B by standing beside it on the ground..no more (makes me want fenders now more than ever). I want to buy a tiltmeter and redline it at 5 degrees, put my bush hog purchase on hold, spread the tractor tires to their widest position, quit lifting logs with the FEL etc.
As gruesome as they are, I believe reading these accounts can increase your safety by raising one's awareness. I think everyone here will recognize a situation where they have been within a second or two of being. Total Body Fragmentation by Wood Chipper?... Geez, what a way to go. Pulled into a round baler causing the belts to slip and catching the whole thing on fire..dang. These are a few of the sensational ones. I quit reading the hundreds and hundreds of tractor rollovers, shaft entanglements, falling equipment and rotary mower events.
I think I am going to go inspect my PTO shaft guards right now..in the cold, at night with a flashlight. I am that perturbed.
Be safe guys.
Greg
Some one posted this link <A target="_blank" HREF=http://www.cdc.gov/niosh/injury/traumamcface.html>http://www.cdc.gov/niosh/injury/traumamcface.html</A> and it chilled me to the bone. I read these stories for three days. Not because I'm morbid or anything but because I kept recognizing situations in which I had probably been seconds away from a lot of these accidents myself - and didn't even know it.
Reading this put me in an ultra paranoid state and caused me to feel slightly uncomfortable the next time I was around the tractor. Reading this also caused me to reflect and and then talk about this to some of my farmer type friends. I never got to the second story before they rebutted with a story about someone they knew. A couple of ones I even remember the accident being on the local news. I once heard that farmers are in the same insurance category as test pilots.
I made several observations:
1) These accidents were numerous with many having very similiar circumstances, only dealt with fatalities-not the vastly greater number of injuries and only the investigated fatalities at that!
2) As a kid, I severely underestimated the danger presented by a rotating PTO shaft.
3) None of the tractor accident victims seemed to be wearing a seatbelt.
4)A large proportion of the accidents were witnessed by close family members.
5) A lot of the dangerous maneuvers were habitual.
Virtually every story left a moral or a point for me to try to incorporate in my routine. I have occasionally started my '51 JD B by standing beside it on the ground..no more (makes me want fenders now more than ever). I want to buy a tiltmeter and redline it at 5 degrees, put my bush hog purchase on hold, spread the tractor tires to their widest position, quit lifting logs with the FEL etc.
As gruesome as they are, I believe reading these accounts can increase your safety by raising one's awareness. I think everyone here will recognize a situation where they have been within a second or two of being. Total Body Fragmentation by Wood Chipper?... Geez, what a way to go. Pulled into a round baler causing the belts to slip and catching the whole thing on fire..dang. These are a few of the sensational ones. I quit reading the hundreds and hundreds of tractor rollovers, shaft entanglements, falling equipment and rotary mower events.
I think I am going to go inspect my PTO shaft guards right now..in the cold, at night with a flashlight. I am that perturbed.
Be safe guys.
Greg