Did you know?

   / Did you know? #1  

froggy

Veteran Member
Joined
Jul 14, 2001
Messages
1,075
Location
Cooke County, Texas
Tractor
JD4320 with TNT, electric diverter, cruise control and air suspension seat.
Found this information on the web:

The typical PTO shaft can:

(1) Wrap up over 6 feet of shoe lace per second. How long is your shoe lace?
(2) Wrap your arm or leg around the PTO shaft nine times in a second? How flexable are you?
(3) Produce second degree burns on your skin when caused by synthetic cloth movement at high speeds.
(4) A very strong man can generate about three-fourths of one horsepower. What is the horsepower of your tractor?
 
   / Did you know? #3  
VERY INTERESTING INFORMATION, but i will guarente you that someone tomorrow, will do something stupid because they will not STOP AND THINK
 
   / Did you know? #4  
PTO driven grain augers are what scare the crap out of me. /forums/images/graemlins/frown.gif
 
   / Did you know? #5  
WOW. That's scary.
One of several things that I was taught when I was an apprentice Mold Maker was that machines have NO feelings. A few gory stories once in a while keeps you with your toes. Gerard
 
   / Did you know? #6  
No kidding.

I had a telephone post hole digger grab a partially buried 2x6 and spin it around. I am glad it broke off on the left wheel......'cause I was standing next to the right wheel.

It happened so fast I could not have even jumped to get out of the way.

Mark
 
   / Did you know? #7  
Gerard, being a machinist I can vouch for what you are saying. I've got all my fingers, but have had some close calls.
 
   / Did you know? #8  
The way it was explained to me: "If you get your hand in there, you might be lucky enough that your arm comes off before the rest of you gets wrapped around it!"

Putting it that way has kept me well clear of moving machinery ever since.

- Rick
 
   / Did you know? #9  
Thank You. Funny how you do not always think of these things till you see them in print. I will remember this post everytime I am behind my tractor hooking up. I need to get longer shoe laces.
 
   / Did you know? #10  
One day my wife was running my Kubota with a baler attached. She didn't like running at pto speed, and I explained to her that the baler needed to run at the right speed to let the tractor run efficiently. Well, she wouldn't listen and I stepped up on the drawbar with a leg on either side of the "shrouded driveshaft" to set the hand throttle. A small setscrew was sticking out just enough to catch my pantleg. I realized instantly that I was caught and stiffened up and grabbed the fenders. Fortunatly I wa wearing an older pair of pant and they ripped completely off me. My suspenders landed about 20ft with part of the beltline in front of the tractor. Of course it killed the tractor and my wife was running around in the field with her hands over her eyes afraid to look at me, screaming if I was ok. I got a small burn on my left knee where the driveshaft rubbed a bit of skin off, but was a little wiser after that. When getting frustrated with moving equipment, step back, cool off and access the situation.
I did get a sunburn as I finished the day with just a shirt and shorts on. But small payment for still being able to walk.
 
   / Did you know?
  • Thread Starter
#11  
This is from the Utah State University and deals with the Ten Commandments of Tractor Safety issued by the Kubota Tractor Corporation:
" <font color="red"> </font> *
Farm Machinery Fact Sheet FM-27
*Reprinted by permission from Kubota Tractor Corporation
On March 26, 1980, a four-year old Nebraska boy was killed when he fell from a tractor driven by his father and was run over by a wheel. The tractor had a cab, but the boy was
thrown against the door, tripped the latch, and out he went.
Unfortunately, this was not an isolated case. There are an estimated 800 fatal farm accidents every year and more than 9,000 injuries. Sad to relate, overturns accounted for nearly 50 percent of the tractor fatalities. Even sadder is the fact that the vast majority of them could—and should—have been prevented. Accidents do not just “happen.” They are caused, which is why they can be prevented. An ounce of prevention is still worth a pound of cure. Your tractor has been designed and built with your safety in mind. Its safe operation,
however, is entirely in your hands. It is a useful and valuable farm machine—not a play thing, not a cow pony, not a rural first cousin to a sports car. It was neither built nor intended for joy riding. The tragedy of the Nebraska four-year old—and that of thousands of others—could have been
prevented.

Ten Commandments of Tractor Safety
1. Know your tractor, its implements and how they work. Keep your tractor in good condition.
2. Use ROPS and seat belt whenever and wherever applicable. We recommend the use of ROPS (Rollover protective structure) in almost all applications. Most tractor fatalities are caused by overturns. If the tractor is equipped with ROPS, always wear the seat belt.
3. Be familiar with your terrain and drive safely. Use caution on slopes, slow down for all turns and stay off the highway whenever possible. Elementary, but all too often neglected.
4. Never start an engine in a closed shed or garage. Carbon monoxide is colorless, odorless—and deadly.
5. Always keep your PTO properly shielded. It rotates with the strength of 500 men.
6. Keep your hitches low and always on the drawbar. Otherwise your tractor might flipover backwards.
7. Never jump off a moving tractor or leave it with its engine running. A runaway tractor can be extremely dangerous.
8. Never refuel while the engine is running or hot. And do not add water to radiator while the engine is hot; hot water can erupt and scald.
9. Keep all children off of and away from your tractor and its implements at all times. A tractor’s work is not child’s play.
10. Never be in a hurry about anything to do with your tractor. Take your time and do it right."
 
   / Did you know? #12  
I was learning to run the PHD and grabbed a tv cable live to the house. It pulled it about 30 feet to the house and pulled it out of the box too. The cable company fixed it all for free since it was to be buried more than 4" under the soil I would have still hit it regardless but at least it cost me nothing to fix.
 
   / Did you know? #13  
</font><font color="blue" class="small">( Fortunatly I wa wearing an older pair of pant and they ripped completely off me )</font>

Wow.. you are one lucky person. I'm glad that worked out ok for you!

Soundguy
 

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