Safety Tips

/ Safety Tips #121  
Re: Safety Tips - No Extra Riders...Please...!

Please resist the urge for riders... Please...?
34-112372-SecondChildRidersInjury.GIF

Those who have lost someone in a farm work incident may struggle for years with guilt and regrets, their minds telling them, "If only we could have a chance to go back and do it over again." {Part 2 of 2}
 

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/ Safety Tips #122  
Re: Safety Tips - No Extra Riders...Please...!

John, I don't remember how many times I have had to tell people this, but when I owned a mobile home park, I constantly had to stop and tell tenants that brush hogging was NOT an spectator "sport." One family even brought out lawn chairs and set them up near where I was working so they could watch me. I had to tell them that either they were going to have to leave or I was going to stop working. I'm sure they thought I was an a_ _ hole, but I don't care. You are correct that the guilt involved with hurting someone would be tremendous. Good post!
 
/ Safety Tips #123  
Re: Safety Tips - No Extra Riders...Please...!

John,

Your posted pictures of the boy riding on the tractor fender brought back a vivid memory from 1972. My sisters third son was being given a ride on some old, even at that time, farm tractor. The driver was a 16 year old friend of his who was not known to be real "responsible" to say the least. Unfortunatley my nephew was sitting on one fender when it collapsed under his weight. He fell to the front of the rear tire and his head and chest were run over. He died on the way to the hospital /w3tcompact/icons/sad.gif. The driver committed suicide several years later.
 
/ Safety Tips #124  
Re: Safety Tips-Front End Loader-Fork Attachment

Using Fork attachments on loaders…

…A 79 year-old farmer (the victim) was crushed to death when a round bale of hay weighing 1,500 - 1,800 lbs., toppled off a tractor's front forks. The victim was in the process of putting hay out for cattle. He positioned the forks underneath the round hay bale instead of sticking the forks into the end of the hay bale. As he raised the hay bale, the victim apparently moved the control lever into the detent position which held the control lever in place. This caused the hay bale to continue to rise to a point where it fell off the forks and landed on the victim as he sat in the operator's seat…

<A target="_blank" HREF=http://www.cdc.gov/niosh/face/stateface/tx/99tx059.html>Farming for over 62 years… the rest of the story…</A>

18-35196-JDMFWDSigJFM.JPG
 
/ Safety Tips #125  
Re: Safety Tips-Earthmoving Operations & Safety...

Earthmoving Operations

This manual has something for everyone… scrapers, boxblades, dozers, loaders, forklift, material moving, road grading/repairing/building, techniques, safety, etc.

Load up plenty of paper for your printer, new cartridge of ink… and print this out…

<A target="_blank" HREF=http://www.adtdl.army.mil/cgi-bin/atdl.dll/fm/5-434/toc.htm>U.S. Army Training/Safety Manual Earthmoving Operations …</A>

18-35197-JD5205JFMsignaturelogo.JPG
 
/ Safety Tips #126  
Re: Safety Tips-Earthmoving Operations & Safety...

John, both of the articles (about the hay bale crushing a man and the manual on equipment usage[/b] were extemely interesting.
Thank you very much!! For these, and all the other fascinating links and information you have posted!
 
/ Safety Tips #127  
Safety Tips-Man crushed while unloading FEL

Heavy duty equipment operator is crushed when front-end loader falls off a trailer during backing...

…A 65-year old heavy duty equipment operator (decedent) died when multiple parts of his body were crushed between the side of a track-driven front-end loader and a concrete curb. The decedent was backing the front-end loader off a low-bed trailer in anticipation of using it to level a pad for a new home. While backing it off, the front-end loader went off the right side of the trailer. The decedent attempted to jump free, but was pinned underneath the machine. The front-end loader had a rollover protective structure (ROPS) and a seat belt which the decedent did not use. The decedent, an owner-operator of a bulldozer, had borrowed this piece of equipment and had limited experience in its operation…

<A target="_blank" HREF=http://www.dhs.cahwnet.gov/ohb/OHSEP/FACE/97CA011.htm>The rest of this terrible story… and Complete Accident Report and recommendations…</A>
 
/ Safety Tips #128  
Safety Tips -Bulldozer accident kills 3-year-old..

<font color=blue>…it breaks my heart to post this tragedy, about 15 miles from my home… please say a prayer for the boy’s soul and his family…</font color=blue>

Charleston, NY- A 3-year-old boy was killed Sunday when a bulldozer his father had been operating accidentally rolled over him.

State Police at Fonda said the boy was trapped under the tracks of the dozer, which rolled backward down an incline just after his father had shut it off.

The accident occurred about 1:45pm in a field off xxx road where the family lives.

State Police said the child and his 10-year-old brother had gone out to meet their father. The father shut down the machinery and the children were standing on the track of the dozer when it began to roll backward.

The older child fell off the side of the dozer and tried to grab his brother, but the 3-year-old fell off the back and was trapped under the track of the machinery.

The older boy was taken to the hospital where he was treated for abrasions and released.

State Police declined to release additional details and the investigation was continuing.

~~~local newspaper~~~
 
/ Safety Tips #129  
Re: Safety Tips -Bulldozer accident kills 3-year-old..

And we shall!!
 
/ Safety Tips #130  
Re: Safety Tips-Snow Removal Safety

Just a friendly reminder to those in snow country… refresh those safety procedures during snow removal… whether by snow blower, shovel, or by tractor…

Lots of hidden obstructions and surprises underneath the snow… boundary lines become clouded and narrow, and that broken down kid’s automobile buried under the snow drift can become a nightmare quickly when moving snow…

<A target="_blank" HREF=http://www.ianr.unl.edu/pubs/health/g949.htm> Safety During Snow Removal</A>

<A target="_blank" HREF=http://www.roadwaysafety.org/guide.PDF>Roadway Safety Guide- pdf</A>
 
/ Safety Tips #131  
Re: Safety Tips - No Extra Riders...Please...!

Tractor Accidents
The accident files of the Occupational Safety and Health Service (OSH) contain numerous photos of farm tractor accidents over the past 20 years - and behind every fading picture is a story of human tragedy…

Accidents continue to happen…

tractor2.gif

Four people died in this accident - A mother and her three children.

Why do people still insist on letting their precious children ride on their lap or the fender of a tractor…?

In your car, you wouldn’t think of driving down the freeway @ 75 mph with a child sitting in your lap, helping you steer… they’d arrest you, put you in jail, and throw away the key…

So why do it with a more dangerous vehicle like a riding lawn mower or compact tractor…?

Please don’t take your children for a tractor ride…
Folks… it’s not fun… it’s just plain stupid and asinine…/forums/images/graemlins/frown.gif
 
/ Safety Tips #132  
Re: Safety Tips - No Extra Riders...Please...!

</font><font color="blue" class="small">( In your car, you wouldn’t think of driving down the freeway @ 75 mph with a child sitting in your lap )</font>

Before the days of mandatory seat belts, child car seats, etc., you'd be amazed at the number of people I've seen driving with a baby sitting or standing in their lap. I always stopped them for a brief visit, knowing that there was nothing legally I could do, and that it they told me to get lost, all I could do was get back in my squad car and drive off. I guess I was just lucky, but every one of them was polite and said they just hadn't thought about the consequences.
 
/ Safety Tips #133  
I\'ve never folded the ROPS on the Kubota.

I've run into situations where I've come up against limbs that were lower than the ROPS and had to be lifted up to allow the ROPS to clear. These can be a threat when one lets go and whips one way or the other.

The solution in one case was to spend the time removing all the branches around the periphery of a pasture that were lower than the ROPS. If you look at a dozer equipped with a forestry package, it has the cage with the heavy screens and the risers. Still I've read stories of operators getting speared by limbs going through the screens.

It just points out that even the highest level of safety equipment won't protect an unwary operator in all circumstances.
 
/ Safety Tips #134  
John, Good safety post. About 1/2 second reaction time vs 3/4 second to turn tractor over. Even if your "startle reflex" didn't paralyze you and you reacted in 1/2 second to a 3/4 second rollover, most likely you would pass the "point of no return" and roll over from momemtum. I saw a guy pulled from under his "old" tractor, pre-ROPS mandatory, after trying to back it off of his trailer at a tractor repair shop. In his haste/distracted state he missed one chain to the drawbar. When the tractor couldn't go back any further it rotated about the rear axle, flipped over and pined the driver to the ground with the steering wheel. He left in an ambulance on a back board with a cervical collar. He was breathing when he left but I don't know his outcome.

Ever read the stats on which jobs are how dangerous? Farming/ranching is nearly as dangerous a profession as they list. Probably THE most dangerous widely practiced.

Patrick
 
/ Safety Tips #135  
Re: I\'ve never folded the ROPS on the Kubota.

Darren, I am slowly working toward a goal of removing all the limbs from trees that are obstructions to navigation for my tractor. I broke a side window out of my cab last year when a bent back limb slapped it. I have a crease in my fiberglass roof of the cab and a limb pulled a wire out of one of my rear lights.

Besides, the place looks much much better with the low branches removed.

Patrick
 
/ Safety Tips #136  
Re: Safety Tips - No Extra Riders...Please...!

My youngest son worked for a local farmer haying for the past five seasons, he started when he was 16. This past summer the farmer told to hop on the tractor fender and ride down to the barn instead of walking like he had intended.

They hit a bump and my son's foot contacted the front of the rear tire which pulled it between the tire and fender. The force riped the back of his heavy work boot apart and started chewing into his heal before he pulled it free.

The back of his foot looked really ugly and was very sore for almost a month. The farmer's only responce was, what did you do that for that was pretty stupid. That was the last day he worked for this guy.

It just goes to show that some old timers forget how dangerous farm equipment can be and not only do dumb things themselves but teach the younger generation to make the same mistakes.

As gruesome as some of thee articles and accidents are I am glad you post them for all to see. Maybe we can learn for the mistakes of others and not have to learn by making them ourselves.

Randy
 
/ Safety Tips #137  
Re: Safety Tips- In a blink of an eye you are DEAD

“Don't gamble.
<font color="red"> A tractor cannot turn over by itself. It only does what you - the operator -command it to do. </font>

Many overturns are related to using bush hog mowers, because we tend to place the tractor in precarious situations attempting to cut all offending vegetation.
Tractors must obey the laws of physics. When you try to cheat on those laws, you lose!...

“Almost all overturns can be prevented by safe operating practices…”

“Tractor overturns occur too fast for you to jump clear in most cases...”

238294-Tractor%20Overturn%20split%20second.jpg


“Unless you are expecting the tractor to flip, your reaction time probably will be even longer (you have a problem if you are expecting it to flip)…

“Proper ballasting maintains proper balance for stability and control…”

“Additional front-end weights are needed when using heavy 3-point hitch mounted cultivators, mowers or other heavy implements and when moving round bales of hay. You are not in control of the tractor if the front wheels lift from the ground when engaging the clutch or starting up slopes or if the front wheels slide when attempting turns….”


“Many overturns occur on relatively flat ground…”


PREVENTING and SURVIVING TRACTOR OVERTURNS
(PDF file)
(Download this, print it out... anyone that uses your tractor... require mandatory reading... it WILL save their life!)

Please don’t end up being foolish DEAD… by not following proper safety procedures… Be smart and stay ALIVE… with Safety…
 

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/ Safety Tips #138  
Re: Safety Tips- In a blink of an eye you are DEAD

Good reading, John. I like the part where it says "a slope is too steep for safe operation if you can't back up it." Good advice.
 
/ Safety Tips #139  
Re: Safety Tips- In a blink of an eye you are DEAD

I think that was a great safety message in general.. but I do have one question....

Unless you are using a peice of chain for a toplink / and / or using a drawbar mower.... I would think the standard run of the mill 3pt mower would tend to act as a stabilizer.. or a wheelie bar per se...... Other opitions on this....

Soundguy
 
/ Safety Tips #140  
Re: Safety Tips- In a blink of an eye you are DEAD

I think my 3pt hitch brush hog has a piece of chain in the top link for flexibility and the A frame is just bolts running through the sides. If the tractor were to wheelie, the brush hog would not stop it(at least mine wouldn't).
 

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