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Say Nothing posted:Homemade log splitter. there's a lot of these on youtube. That bald guy is a goddamned retard. By trying to "be safe" about it, he's actually making it far more dangerous. Setting the logs on the rest and sliding them into the path is safer than basically throwing the log at the contraption and hoping that it doesn't spit it straight into your face. Probably wouldn't use it personally, in any case.
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# ? Mar 11, 2016 03:31 |
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# ? May 14, 2024 12:17 |
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It's not like log splitters cost a lot. A good gas powered one can be had for a few hundred. Then again, rednecks.
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# ? Mar 11, 2016 03:51 |
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Nierbo posted:Got my toe run over by a pallet jack at work the other day. Took the big toe nail off. First two pics are a few mins after it happened and the last pic is just an hr ago after I took the dressing off for the first time. Steel toed boots are for fags. I applaud your kingly example of manning the gently caress up. EDIT: You deserve to get injured.
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# ? Mar 11, 2016 03:55 |
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Nierbo posted:Got my toe run over by a pallet jack at work the other day. Took the big toe nail off. First two pics are a few mins after it happened and the last pic is just an hr ago after I took the dressing off for the first time. I hope that grows back right for you. I had a toenail inadvertently removed during a surgery to deal with the fact that it was massively ingrown on both sides (runners, you know what I'm talking about), and it grew back as a twisted feeble thing that occasionally pops right back off again when I take my sock off.
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# ? Mar 11, 2016 04:04 |
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GirlBones posted:It's true that MSHA are major sticklers but IIRC ~30 people died in mines in the US last year compared to like 1,000 in construction so... There's useful stickling and not so useful stickling though. When you get two or three citations for smoking near a diesel tank when the "evidence" is cig butts that are pretty obviously 4 months old and got pushed there by a snowplow, I'm not so sure it's really doing any good. But in general I have no problem with MSHA. poo poo like that isn't good, as is the tendency that I've seen where if they "like" you you're in good shape but if they get pissed at you you're totally hosed (i.e. what is really a non issue and either would have been ignored or at best they tell you to fix it and don't write any paper, turns into "I'm gonna write this same citation 14 times.")
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# ? Mar 11, 2016 04:10 |
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GirlBones posted:It's true that MSHA are major sticklers but IIRC ~30 people died in mines in the US last year compared to like 1,000 in construction so... How many people work in mines compared to how many work in construction? 14.2 fatalities/100,000 full time mine workers: http://www.cdc.gov/niosh/mining/UserFiles/statistics/13g09aaa.svg 11.8 fatalities/100,000 full time construction workers: http://www.bls.gov/news.release/cfoi.nr0.htm
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# ? Mar 11, 2016 04:19 |
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JB50 posted:It's not like log splitters cost a lot. A good gas powered one can be had for a few hundred. Then again, rednecks. I like the giant screw ones you bolt on to the wheel of an old car to split like 18 inch diameter logs 3+ feet long. They seem a lot safer than the big axe wheels.
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# ? Mar 11, 2016 04:23 |
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calvus posted:Being thrown clear sounds great, unless you think about all the hard objects out there like trees, the ground etc, it really is complicated That and getting crushed when your own vehicle rolls over you.
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# ? Mar 11, 2016 04:24 |
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JB50 posted:It's not like log splitters cost a lot. A good gas powered one can be had for a few hundred. Then again, rednecks. New, they'll run you a cool grand usually. I paid ~$900 for mine years ago. I cut and split between 7 and 10 cords of firewood per season, and what cracks me up about these guys using their "homebuilt" splitters is that it appears that they're usually splitting perfectly straight grained, knot free, relatively soft looking wood. An axe would be safer, and probably quicker since it would be like splitting styrofoam. I want to see how effective one of designs are when it's put up against a gnarly piece of 100 year old Sugar Maple where the grain runs at 90 degree angles. Regardless, no way I'd stick my hands near one of those things.
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# ? Mar 11, 2016 04:26 |
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FrankieGoes posted:There's useful stickling and not so useful stickling though. When you get two or three citations for smoking near a diesel tank when the "evidence" is cig butts that are pretty obviously 4 months old and got pushed there by a snowplow, I'm not so sure it's really doing any good. The idea is when something fucks up in a mine people don't get hurt. They die. That fire? Have fun with no more oxygen. Support structure breaks? Don't burrow into the rock just right? Have fun digging dudes out.
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# ? Mar 11, 2016 04:35 |
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Grenade in microwave. http://i.imgur.com/67saPUG.webm
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# ? Mar 11, 2016 04:45 |
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Say Nothing posted:Grenade in microwave. That looks like it was fun to shoot
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# ? Mar 11, 2016 05:00 |
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Say Nothing posted:Grenade in microwave. Not eastern european so clearly fake.
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# ? Mar 11, 2016 05:37 |
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JB50 posted:Not eastern european so clearly fake. Well, that and frag grenades don't blast people through the air with no injuries, on a trajectory matching being yanked by a rope
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# ? Mar 11, 2016 06:40 |
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FrankieGoes posted:That bald guy is a goddamned retard. By trying to "be safe" about it, he's actually making it far more dangerous. Setting the logs on the rest and sliding them into the path is safer than basically throwing the log at the contraption and hoping that it doesn't spit it straight into your face. Say Nothing posted:Grenade in microwave. Oh hey, here's the original, that's actually kinda worth watching, even though it's still 90% fake: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tBscQZkOzdo Mithaldu fucked around with this message at 13:33 on Mar 11, 2016 |
# ? Mar 11, 2016 13:26 |
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Say Nothing posted:Grenade in microwave. Toaster oven.
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# ? Mar 11, 2016 13:56 |
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Say Nothing posted:Homemade log splitter. there's a lot of these on youtube. Here's one that's not actually bad: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bk-XcO7mcD0
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# ? Mar 11, 2016 14:26 |
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His Divine Shadow posted:Here's one that's not actually bad: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bk-XcO7mcD0 Would that really be any more forceful? For him to strike downward into the wood he'd need to be struggling against the force of the spring. Unless I'm missing something physics-wise.
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# ? Mar 11, 2016 14:40 |
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CommonShore posted:Would that really be any more forceful? For him to strike downward into the wood he'd need to be struggling against the force of the spring. Unless I'm missing something physics-wise. The chopping head is probably quite heavy, and the spring is barely enough to hold it up. Give it a small assist and gravity and inertia handle the rest.
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# ? Mar 11, 2016 14:44 |
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Mithaldu posted:Pretty sure those guys know how to use it and play it up for the yucks by using it entirely wrong. Blue handle on the grenade, I knew it was a dummy the moment I saw it. Also figured they used tannerite in the explosion. Always wanted to play with "reactive" targets myself.
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# ? Mar 11, 2016 16:22 |
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Yesterday 2 guys climbed into the kilns to fix something, neither of them are trained for it and with no assistance or protection either. Today, a rabbit found its way into on our stone piles and now its being cooked along with our pavers.
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# ? Mar 11, 2016 18:14 |
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His Divine Shadow posted:Here's one that's not actually bad: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bk-XcO7mcD0 "KLYV IV" is a pretty name On the subject of being safe because it's only your sister company being shut down: I was a manager at Ameridose, a high volume compounding pharmacy who had a sister company in the next town called NECC. NECC, due to being built adjacent to a recycling plant and just by cutting corners, sent out a couple hundred doses of the injectable spinal steroid methylprednisolone contaminated with fungal meningitis. 800+ people got sick, 64 died, and NECC was closed pending investigation by the FDA and CDC. Since NECC and Ameridose had the same owners and upper management, they knew that the blood was in the water and that Ameridose would be inspected next, so they set about getting everything in order. NECC and Ameridose's biggest selling point to customers was "same day turnaround", meaning that they could have a drug order custom made and on a truck the day it was ordered by the hospital, and charged a significant premium for the service. The problem with this is that it left a maximum of 12 hours for QC to test and recall batches of drug, diluent, and other elements before it was out the door, this was "compounded" by another factor in the compounding pharmacy business model: copyrights and patents on drugs exist and are honored only while you have the ability to make them, so Ameridose would buy up all of a raw ingredient necessary to make a drug sold solely by another manufacturer, and when that other manufacturer's production lines shut down anyone with the ability to make the drug can now legally set their own price to sell it. For example, after buying all of the raw stock to manufacture the cancer drug Ondansitron, we are suddenly allowed to sell the 12¢ syringes for $15 a pop until the licensed manufacturer is able to again, pumping out 60,000 units a day that the hospitals gladly bought in a panic because of the perceived shortage in the market. They're hospitals, they can afford it. This mix of same day turnaround and frenetic production in tight windows of opportunity led to significant strain on our QC department, and some corners were cut. Our QC department was very good at catching and recalling bad batches of a drug quickly, but none of the follow-up due diligence was being done after the fact. Once the bad drug was taken off the truck, nobody was going back to to identify the root cause, like contaminated diluent, defective bags, or a tech scratching their ball rash too much. Once upper management realized that this wasn't being done and that the CDC and FDA inspectors were going to be on-site at any day, they did the only sensible thing: printed out 2 years of backdated documentation and ordered a QC tech to falsify the paperwork. She did, and immediately blew the whistle to the inspectors. The owners were arrested at their homes, and the lead pharmacist was caught at the airport trying to flee to Hong Kong. Ameridose and NECC subsequently filed for bankruptcy under the weight of the lawsuits and fines. PS: I hated the place and left a few weeks before the shitstorm hit for unrelated reasons.
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# ? Mar 11, 2016 20:06 |
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You forgot to mention the actual fuckups. From Wikipedia:quote:A bird was observed flying around inside the building in an area where finished drugs are stored
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# ? Mar 11, 2016 21:44 |
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Mithaldu posted:You forgot to mention the actual fuckups. From Wikipedia: Yeah, the place was a powder keg, but made so much money that they could make everything go away. Part of why I left. I was there while they were doing the clean room expansion, with construction crews, HVAC, electricians etc dicking around while trying to run an active sterile clean room. At one point we had a line of buckets over a shelf of oxytocin bags because they didn't seal the roof around the new air handler. Edit: I forgot to mention that a prior manager tried to get rid of the birds by poisoning them, but never found the corpses.
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# ? Mar 11, 2016 21:56 |
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Who would imagine that the biggest source of WTF in various ways in a drug production company would be birds.
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# ? Mar 11, 2016 21:59 |
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Mithaldu posted:Who would imagine that the biggest source of WTF in various ways in a drug production company would be birds. The layout of the building made it difficult to avoid. Keeping the production floor at positive pressure only works while the doors are shut, it's kind of defeated when you have a dozen UPS and FedEx trucks come through every day. The biggest issue they had was their rapid growth in a really short time. They went from 8 to 500 plus employees in a few years, and it was a frequent issue to have a problem arise that nobody had ever encountered before, so they were essentially making up SOPs on the fly without any testing or discussion. If it didn't work you could just throw a few million bucks at it and make it go away.
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# ? Mar 11, 2016 22:08 |
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Robot Lincoln posted:"KLYV IV" is a pretty name Can make like a funny gif of this happening?
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# ? Mar 11, 2016 22:23 |
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Tenzarin posted:Can make like a funny gif of this happening? That's what your imagination is for.
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# ? Mar 11, 2016 23:48 |
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Hazards in the workplace.
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# ? Mar 12, 2016 00:26 |
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Robot Lincoln posted:copyrights and patents on drugs exist and are honored only while you have the ability to make them, so Ameridose would buy up all of a raw ingredient necessary to make a drug sold solely by another manufacturer, and when that other manufacturer's production lines shut down anyone with the ability to make the drug can now legally set their own price to sell it. For example, after buying all of the raw stock to manufacture the cancer drug Ondansitron, we are suddenly allowed to sell the 12¢ syringes for $15 a pop until the licensed manufacturer is able to again, pumping out 60,000 units a day that the hospitals gladly bought in a panic because of the perceived shortage in the market. They're hospitals, they can afford it. That’s one of the shadiest and most underhanded tactics I’ve ever heard of. I wish I’d thought of it.
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# ? Mar 12, 2016 01:44 |
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Phanatic posted:I hope that grows back right for you. I had a toenail inadvertently removed during a surgery to deal with the fact that it was massively ingrown on both sides (runners, you know what I'm talking about), and it grew back as a twisted feeble thing that occasionally pops right back off again when I take my sock off. Is there some method to taking care of it so that it growsd back normal?
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# ? Mar 12, 2016 01:49 |
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Platystemon posted:That’s one of the shadiest and most underhanded tactics I’ve ever heard of. It's basically the same as playing the futures market, just with a much more significant chance of winning big since drug prices are so overinflated.
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# ? Mar 12, 2016 01:49 |
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Electrode coffee cup heater (more UL than OHSA) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EViyccc2t9w
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# ? Mar 12, 2016 02:12 |
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His entire channel is OSHA as hell. Edit: Disappointed that isn't one of those that rusts all into your drink. Mithaldu fucked around with this message at 02:33 on Mar 12, 2016 |
# ? Mar 12, 2016 02:26 |
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Three-Phase posted:Electrode coffee cup heater (more UL than OHSA) I was more scared and nervous watching this video than the one of the guy feeding the cobras.
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# ? Mar 12, 2016 02:40 |
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Robot Lincoln posted:It's basically the same as playing the futures market, just with a much more significant chance of winning big since drug prices are so overinflated. It’s cornering the market, except that the corner kills two birds with one stone by shutting down the patents.
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# ? Mar 12, 2016 02:51 |
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http://i.imgur.com/O8YkOYI.gifv
Mithaldu fucked around with this message at 09:34 on Mar 12, 2016 |
# ? Mar 12, 2016 09:30 |
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http://i.imgur.com/GL9Je3O.gifv
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# ? Mar 12, 2016 10:01 |
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Platystemon posted:That’s one of the shadiest and most underhanded tactics I’ve ever heard of. I fell like in any well-ordered society this sort of tactic wouldn't just end in prosecution, but in people being dragged from their offices and hung from lamp posts.
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# ? Mar 12, 2016 10:06 |
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# ? May 14, 2024 12:17 |
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goddamnedtwisto posted:I fell like in any well-ordered society this sort of tactic wouldn't just end in prosecution, but in people being dragged from their offices and hung from lamp posts. Wow. Uh, your av/red text is spot on.
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# ? Mar 12, 2016 10:29 |