John_Mc
Elite Member
- Joined
- Aug 11, 2001
- Messages
- 4,577
- Location
- Monkton, Vermont
- Tractor
- NH TC33D Modified with belly pan, limb risers & FOPS. Honda Pioneer 520 & antique Coot UTV
I've not really had an issue with the screen on my forestry helmet messing with my vision.Safety glasses or nothing in my book are the answers neither of them mess with your vision well sighting in either like screen does.
Wearing no eye protection just is not an option for me. I remember when I started as a shift supervisor in the wire mill back in 1986. I had been working in that position for about 3 months and knew everyone in the department fairly well. That day, I noticed a guy I did not recognize running one of our rolling mills. He obviously knew what he was doing, so he was not new. I asked someone who it was. "Oh, that's Bill. He's worked here for 30 years, most of them on that machine. He was out for eye surgery, and just got released to come back to work. They thought he might lose sight in that eye, but he says he can still see fairly good out of it." Bill later told me that he had injured his eye while grinding on a butt weld used to join the end of one coil of wire onto another. That day, a hot spark got into his eye. From there, our conversation went something like this:
Me: Maybe wearing your safety glasses over your eyes rather than on the top of your head (as he had them at the moment) might reduce the chances of it happening again.
Bill: I've been doing this a dozen or more times a day for 35 years without a problem. I know to aim the sparks away from me. I'll be fine. Besides, the glasses are all scratched up and hard to see through.
Me: On the day the accident happened, did you get up and say "I'm going to have an accident today"?
Bill: No. How the $*#! would I know that?
Me: No one plans to have an accident. They just happen. They happen to the new kids or the guys with decades of experience. If you want to be able to read your grandkid a bedtime story or watch him play football when he gets a little older, put your glasses on. I'll go get you a new pair, but use those until I get back.
Bill: [grumbles and puts the glasses on]
A week or two later, there he is grinding way with his glasses on top of his head. I remind him. He puts them back on. A few months later, he misses a few days due to another eye injury - fortunately, not nearly as bad as the first one. He just needed to get the little crumb of metal out and let the scratches on his eye heal up a bit. His glasses were on top of his head at the time. On his first day back as he prepares to start up his machine, I walk up to him. Before I can say a thing, he comes out with: "I know, I know! Put my glasses on. 35 years without a problem, and then twice within a few months of each other. You jinxed me! I get it, I'll wear my glasses. I guess 'the man upstairs' is trying to end me a message."
I think of Bill when I'm tempted to make "just a couple cuts" without putting my safety gear on, or make that one last cut after I've already thrown my chaps and helmet back in the truck.