This was a pretty new disc. I didn't realize it was falling apart till the grinder bucked in my hand. It could have been a lot worse.
http://i1209.photobucket.com/albums/...sc006-Copy.jpg
This was a pretty new disc. I didn't realize it was falling apart till the grinder bucked in my hand. It could have been a lot worse.
http://i1209.photobucket.com/albums/...sc006-Copy.jpg
People may laugh at me, but that's ok. I laugh all the way to the bank.
Good post Mick, glad you didn't get hurt. And just a reminder to the new guys that this is one tool that you must wear eye protection 100% on the time.
If it wasn't for the $ in $crap, it would just be.....
I always wanted to try a diamond disk on my grinder, but every time I reach for one at the store, I see the scars on my hands and fingers and remember the ones on my knees and am reminded of why I have never bought one.
"anyone who thinks scrappin is easy money ain't doin it right!"
Mick, Just dont hit your hand with one of these. it really hurts
Knot Cup Brush — 2 3/4in. Dia. | Wire Wheels Brushes| Northern Tool + Equipment
God is great, scrap is good, and people are crazy
Its better to be scrapping and thinking of God than sitting in church thinking of scrapping
My helper has an artificial lens and lost most of his vision in an eye due to a disintegrating disc (on an air powered grinder), I have had disc chunks go through Carharts/gloves etc. It is super dangerous, I only use electric now and try to never use thin cutting discs, I have not seen any difference in brands except that the Forney's seem to not disintegrate into chunks( but they wear out really fast).Full face mask is recommended.
What brand disc was it?
Dont leave them outside either for a extended period. I see this happening every spring with chopsaws.
I was using my new gas powered Makita Demolition 14 saw with a metal cutting disk. I was trying to cut apart an auto frame, it got bound and exploded. I was wearing a chain saw safety helmet with the wire mesh and part of it went back in my face. The mesh shield held it was all bent up but I wasn't hurt, I learned to be more cautious and use a sawzall more that the gas powered cut off saw.
I've had what happened to Mick happen to me. I was cutting up a rusted bolt or something like that and I stopped to see how much I had left to cut and I looked at the grinder blade and it looked just like Mick's. It scared the crap out of me to think it could have exploded if I hadn't seen that. I only have one good eye (can't even read highway signs with it) so I have to be super cautious when I'm working, if I loose my good one, I'm out of luck. I was wearing prescription safety glasses at the time, but the rest of my face was exposed at the time. After that, I went and bought a face mask at Harbor Freight to wear over my glasses for extra protection. I guess I would just say always stop every once in a while to check. It may be the two second check that could save your vision.
I bought this face mask:
Adjustable Face Shield
Last edited by Gravitar; 03-24-2013 at 01:51 PM. Reason: Added link as a picture link on accident. Oops.
Made in China, Recycled in the Republic of Texas!
"When the mind fails, brute force prevails" - CTSSolutions
I had one shatter on me as well, One piece went through my glove and into my thumb cuticle, the other two pieces shot off and went into my leg, just above the knee. Still have the scars as a reminder every day.
I'm so into scrapping.. When my Steel Toe Boots Wear out, I cut the Steel out of them and recycle the Toe!
Knock on wood. I use cutting discs almost everyday at work and have never had a problem. They do get worn and start to crumble apart like the one in the picture but I've never seen one explode. The reason they wear out like that is your putting too much pressure on it. When you use a cutting wheel you let it sit softly on the metal surface that your cutting. Let the wheel cut through and progress on its own.
Also when trying to use a cutting wheel in a limited access area, if you hit a corner or something it will chip and ruin the wheel like the one in the picture.
What size of disc have... want to see some original pictures of this ...
after working as a fabricator for 9+ years i've learned a couple things.
1. position your body so that it is out of the plane of the sparks. (old jeans are netorious for catching fire.) and when it binds and catches it will kick out.
2. close fitting safety glasses or goggles, and a faceshield. always 2 layers of eye protection. faceshields have different impact rating requirements than safety glasses,and are designed to deflect mutiple small particles, where safety glasses are designed to protect against 1 impact.
3. eye protection is a consumable and should be thrown away after it has done it's job.
4. moisture/ humidity destroys grinding discs. they get hot and the water rapidly expands into steam causing them to explode.
there are tons of safety videos on youtube
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