A few days ago a racing buddy of mine was using a 4" angle grinder while doing some metal fabrication, and it hung up and bounced back...onto his FACE. Only his glasses saved him. It's pretty bad and there was a lot of metal in his face and shards were cauterized into the wound from the heat of the grinder. It basically cut from the bridge of his nose into his face horizontally, about 2-1/2" deep.
I have a link where his wife posts her blog entry, with photos and a quick video but I won't post them unless I get enough interest to risk a time-out (it's graphic, but actually more medically interesting than "gory").
Anyway, we've discussed cars falling on people while performing maintenance and IIRC we even lost a BITOG member from something to that effect, always a solemn reminder to BE SAFE, have your phone or someone nearby to help you, and have a plan in place. I know I don't have a good First Aid kit in the garage, and our nearest hospitals are jokes at best.
My twin brother was working with a Skil saw a few years ago cutting up junk furniture in his girlfriend's dad's garage (who had recently passed, they were clearing out junk) and the saw kicked and he buried it into his thigh right down to the bone. Used a belt as a tournequet and rushed to the hospital, scary stuff. That was 2 years ago. Side note, at the moment he had the saw in his leg I had a horrible feeling in the pit of my stomach, and I turned to my wife and said "Something is wrong"...an hour later I got the phone call from my mom. 1600 miles away. Crazy stuff. Twin bond is real stuff.
Cliff Notes-- be safe with tools!
I have a link where his wife posts her blog entry, with photos and a quick video but I won't post them unless I get enough interest to risk a time-out (it's graphic, but actually more medically interesting than "gory").
Anyway, we've discussed cars falling on people while performing maintenance and IIRC we even lost a BITOG member from something to that effect, always a solemn reminder to BE SAFE, have your phone or someone nearby to help you, and have a plan in place. I know I don't have a good First Aid kit in the garage, and our nearest hospitals are jokes at best.
My twin brother was working with a Skil saw a few years ago cutting up junk furniture in his girlfriend's dad's garage (who had recently passed, they were clearing out junk) and the saw kicked and he buried it into his thigh right down to the bone. Used a belt as a tournequet and rushed to the hospital, scary stuff. That was 2 years ago. Side note, at the moment he had the saw in his leg I had a horrible feeling in the pit of my stomach, and I turned to my wife and said "Something is wrong"...an hour later I got the phone call from my mom. 1600 miles away. Crazy stuff. Twin bond is real stuff.
Cliff Notes-- be safe with tools!