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How many paramedics should be on hand to change a lightbulb?

Asphalt/Dirtman

Well-Known Member
Joined
Dec 30, 2010
Messages
66
Location
Ohio
thats a good one.
I'd like to see if he was brave enough to stay on the ladder while it was raised and lowered haha
 

oriden

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jan 11, 2009
Messages
189
Location
Winnipeg
Occupation
Equipment operator/ truck driver/ wrench operator/
it takes all kinds..
 

Hendrik

Senior Member
Joined
Mar 5, 2009
Messages
1,232
Location
Adelaide South Australia
thats a good one.
I'd like to see if he was brave enough to stay on the ladder while it was raised and lowered haha
My theory is that he did this all by himself and climbed up the arm............well unless the idiot that was in the cab was genius enough to get out and take a picture to share with the world........."look ma what i gone done with Zeb"
 

Yepblaze

Member
Joined
Mar 10, 2010
Messages
18
Location
Vermont
Keep your nose clean and your mouth shut.

If the foreman tells you to take the new guy around back and fix it, do it.
 

watglen

Senior Member
Joined
Apr 3, 2009
Messages
1,324
Location
Dunnville, Ontario, Canada
Occupation
Farmer, drainage and excavating contractor, Farm d
I can't say much here. I count count the number of times i've worked from a loader bucket.

I wouldn't do exactly that though, that's just asking for a broken neck.
 

qball

Senior Member
Joined
Dec 30, 2007
Messages
1,072
Location
il
Occupation
local 150 operator
wow!
i would love to be TOLD to do that.
i would have a two word reply, and it ain't "let's dance"
 

Muffler Bearing

Senior Member
Joined
Mar 26, 2009
Messages
512
Location
Colorful Colorado
Occupation
Truck Mechanic
HAHAHA! you guys are great. I think he stood in the bucket as it was raised, then climbed, but he is a ways up there, they actually poured a few buckets of sand first to fill in a hole and keep the front wheels level with the back. I just took the picture and shook my head.:pointhead
 

Asphalt/Dirtman

Well-Known Member
Joined
Dec 30, 2010
Messages
66
Location
Ohio
Just remebered a story looking at this picture.
Few years back, running an old old old old GAS bucket tractor for a guy trimming limbs so his combine wouldn't get scraped up. Had a electric pole saw, small honda generator, large chain saw, and his dumb butt in the bucket. Raised up as high as it could go which is pretty high, think a large skid loader maxed out. Reaching up to cut a very very large limb.

I'm just doing as im told but the limb looks like its going to fall onto the bucket and tip this tractor, i have no cab, him up there cutting. I put it in park and bail back away from tractor. He cuts it, it drops and misses the bucket by a mater of inches, bout pulls him off. Bout hits the bucket and makes the tractor nose dive.

He has this bewildered look and I just shake my head. Not smart...
 

qball

Senior Member
Joined
Dec 30, 2007
Messages
1,072
Location
il
Occupation
local 150 operator
a fall of 6 feet has a 50% chance of killing and the numbers climb exponentially with each rise in height.
shortcuts can and do kill.
some of this safety stuff seems cliche, but it is all too true.
we all have a duty to work safe and help those who are too stupid to know.
 

td25c

Senior Member
Joined
Feb 14, 2009
Messages
5,250
Location
indiana
Amen Q. My buddy worked bridge job's his whole life without any major injuries.He retired few years ago,built a new home, and while hanging the gutter on the front porch he slipped on the ladder and fell 5 feet to the ground & broke his back.Layed there for a couple hours until his nieghbor found him. You dont have to fall very far to get hurt bad.
 

RocksnRoses

Senior Member
Joined
Jun 14, 2008
Messages
770
Location
South Australia
Occupation
Owner operater crushing & contracting business
Quite a few years ago at a local grain terminal here, a chap was sitting on a chair on an elevated platform about 8 feet high, overseeing the loading of trucks. For some reason, he over balanced on the chair and fell between the railings to the ground and he died. I think he broke his neck.

RnR.
 

fast_st

Senior Member
Joined
Dec 1, 2010
Messages
1,468
Location
Mass
Occupation
IT systems admin
I think we all balance the risks everyday, look at the whole situation and make the call, is it safe enough. I was working the other day and noticed that I was in a spot where if the backhoe boom hydraulics failed that I'd get clipped by the bucket, changed my angle of work a bit. I know someone out there has had an uncontained hydraulic failure. I've not had one in a way that allows something to drop, I also try to replace lines in pairs when they look scabby.
 

Randy88

Senior Member
Joined
Feb 2, 2009
Messages
2,149
Location
iowa
If god intended man to be any higher in the air, he'd have made his legs longer, until then I'll stay about as high off the ground as mine get me or have a harness on my worthless body and anchored to something bigger than I to hold me in case I slip and fall. I might be insured but everyones gonna have to wait until I die of natural causes not stupidity induced causes to collect the few pennies I"m worth.

Fast_st, hoses aren't the only things to cause problems, I had a valve act up once on my excavator and it automatically made the stick extend and stay straight out and it couldn't be retracted for anything, we ended up taking the valve off and apart to remedy the problem, I never quite forgot that and always keep it in mind when anyones around a machine running, it can jerk suddenly one way or another or move on its own and can't be stopped without shutting off the engine. If anyone would have been in front of the excavator sticki that day they would have been killed instantly and nothing could have been done to prevent it, the mechanic that solved it said it was a freak deal and there was no way to predict or prevent it. Just a thought to keep in mind.
 

Taylortractornu

Charter Member
Joined
Nov 13, 2003
Messages
481
Location
Iuka, Mississippi
Occupation
Privvate landfill operator/manager
I have a work platform for my skid steer loader but it anything short of a both rams breaking it would be a slower fall as the lines have restrictors. I did work in a plant one time with an a hole of a plant manager in there. He threatened to fire me if I wouldnt stand on an old clark fork lift with a leaking lift cylinder.


He went up and the man running it let it top out in the cylinder. He was up there taking achain hoist down and the whole bottom of the cylinder blew off. It dropped the PM down 15 feet breaking his ankles.
 

sh0rtlife

Active Member
Joined
Jan 28, 2011
Messages
42
Location
nw oregon
and how many times have i been in a bucket at max extension or pull the indoor forklift to the very edge of the cement..tilt it out a lil and raise it up into the 3rd lift extension shut her down and climb up to install a light fixture or change one out...fun stuff but you cant shoot pics workin alone lol

this looks right up my ally...its safe so long as your balance is good and your used to doing it...
 

Hendrik

Senior Member
Joined
Mar 5, 2009
Messages
1,232
Location
Adelaide South Australia
Quite a few years ago at a local grain terminal here, a chap was sitting on a chair on an elevated platform about 8 feet high, overseeing the loading of trucks. For some reason, he over balanced on the chair and fell between the railings to the ground and he died. I think he broke his neck.

RnR.
And this is why you get taught in school not to swing on your chair.
 
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