painful reading...but sure important because many of us love to use firewood.
this is a topic that really interests me.
I've been doing it for over sixty years. Started off with two older brothers and father splitting seven cord a winter
before they had logsplitters. Buzz saw on JD B, wedges and prayers not to get hurt. And amazingly we didn't.
Now I live by myself and using my logsplitter, which I adore, a TSC large model that works great, I have to be
extra careful because other than my cell phone, which I religiously carry, I'm on my own and not within sight of neighbors.
And i don't care if I'm a retired insurance underwriter and risk averse, I can still screw up and hurt myself.
Personally I think it gets down to that old saying
Familiarity Breeds Contempt
though in this case I'd say it breeds lack of care, no matter how you describe it,
you forgot to do what you knew you had to do.
Operator error accidents.
Not mechanical failure.
Operator failure.
And absolutely yes to stopping before you get too tired.
So we have to be extra careful later in the day.
I'm sorry for your injury and thankful for your educating us here.
Sharing this kind of info will hopefully help someone else prevent getting hurt
and then you have done a very good thing.
Steel toed shoes. Kevlar gloves. Safety glasses.
Hands wide open when the ram is moving, meaning out of the way and where you actually see them
and not where you think they are. Muscle memory isn't perfect...
and I bet more folks get hurt on the very end of the logsplitter, the flat part, getting their hands in there, than anywhere else.
I admit to sometimes darting my hand in to clear out wood junk while the ram is reversing and thinking
to myself, that's pretty stupid. As i keep doing it. Need to use a stick, NOT my hand.
Operator error.
Cold weather settling in, time to burn more firewood so I can split some more next year.
I have about 14 acres of woods and there's always something to harvest that's dead in there.
Great fun. I don't hunt deer; I'd rather hunt a nice dead red oak...:thumbsup:
Weren't we all told fingers don't grow back as little kids?
Just remember the Hill Street Blues sergeant sending his officers out from the break room with the warning "be careful, it's dangerous out there".
I want to have fun but getting hurt sucks.
S219, it's great exercise, the wood smells wonderful when you split it, keep going as a smarter operator. Hope that finger gets better quickly.