Safety First (Graphic Content)

Last summer I was troubleshooting my 1990's Beeman RS1000 break-barrel. I VERY stupidly forgot that the barrel would slam closed when the trigger is pulled.

Anyway - I digress. I cried from my stupidity, not the pain. Pass this on to anyone you know who doesn't take break-barrels seriously.

This is the main reason I picked up an Air Venturi Avenger and loving it!

Ponz

1.1651249140.jpg
2.1651249163.jpg

 
We all make mistakes. Luckily no one else was hurt. I absent mindedly pulled the trigger on my 1322 pcp (treating it like a normal 1322) with the upper removed, and turned my transfer port into a projectile. I'm sure I could have easily disabled one of my eyes, but I was fortunate and it damaged my ceiling instead. Any of these force generating devices are demanding of utmost respect and caution. I try not to work on or operate any if I'm low on sleep or focus. 
 
John, glad you were brave enough to post this. This hobby/activity requires situational awareness at all times whether using PCP'S or break barrels. If just one person ups their game on safety after seeing this you've benefited others by your mistake! We've all probably done "stupid" stuff even though we're not stupid people. Stay safe & ENJOY! (Guess you're not Pavlovian enough to avoid airguns altogether- our gain through your pain. THANKS! )
 
John, glad you were brave enough to post this. This hobby/activity requires situational awareness at all times whether using PCP'S or break barrels. If just one person ups their game on safety after seeing this you've benefited others by your mistake! We've all probably done "stupid" stuff even though we're not stupid people. Stay safe & ENJOY! (Guess you're not Pavlovian enough to avoid airguns altogether- our gain through your pain. THANKS! )

Tell me about numb!
 
I am just down to 9.9 fingers, as a kid ( 16 YO ) in my first job i was cutting 5 mm steel on the big 8 foot hydraulic shear with the apprentice.

This left us with a end piece some 20 mm winder than it was supposed to be, so using a tape measure we just cut it to size on our side of the machine.

BUT ! the safety grade which was supposed to be 1 - 2 mm over the max cutting thickness ( 8 mm ) well it was way up, and i had a finger right under one of the hydraulic pistons that clamp down on the plate as it is getting cut.

The apprentice turned paper white in the face, i dident really feel anything due to the severe pressure, so i took the opportunity to have a look at how a finger look on the inside,,,,, and the apprentice took the opportunity to go to "sleep".

So i walked to the foreman and he put a big cartoon like bandage on my finger and called 911, before he went to wake up the "sleeping" apprentice.

The ambulance came all lit up and noisy, and the guys there insisted on me laying down, but i wouldn't have any of that and in the end i made the journey to the hospital sitting in the paramedics chair.

At the hospital ( this was back when they worked better ) i waited for +2 hours before someone had the time to patch me up, and by then my finger was throbbing and hurting. But not more than getting a local shot to take the pain i was allowed to sit up so i could monitor the fix of my finger, which entailed filing the tip of the crushed bone round in the tip and then stitching things back together.

Went home,,,,, and returned in a hour to the hospital to get more stitches, this time without any Novocaine / whatever shot, so not fun at all, but at least it stopped the bleeding.



It was a bit more than i would dare fix myself, but otherwise i have sown illicit wounds in myself as things some times got out of hand during hand 2 hand practice or just living on the Danish mean streets in general.
 
I was air nailing trim to a window frame and a brad nail followed the grain of the wood, turned, and nailed my finger to the window. The tool bucket with the pry bar was 6' away, just out of reach. I wasn't wearing a tool belt because it was trim nailing, so "no need." Eventually I pried the trim out by hand and then removed the trim piece that was hanging there nailed to my finger, from my finger.

Another time I sliced my finger to the bone while sharpening knives. Wrapped it in salt, paper towel, and tape. Bled for three days, but looks like new now.

I recently cut the very tip of my finger off in an industrial fan. Squeezed the sh!t out of it to keep the swelling down, cleaned it good, dry-bandaged it and it grew back in a month or so, but the nerves took longer and they "feel strange" when touching things.

So when I release the Yong Heng compressor manual, keep in mind it's not something to work on if you're not willing to take risks and live with the results.
 
As a kid on the local playground, it was customary to every summer provide kids with hammer / saws / nails and a lot of wood so we could build cool stuff.

So one summer i stepped on a board with a nail in it and put it thru my foot, that of course hurt so to get it off i stepped on the board so i could pull my foot off the nail, with the result i stepped on another nail with the other foot, though this time not all the way thru the foot.

Anyway i got home, and my mother put my feet in lukewarm water with what we call brown soap, and i sat there for a while.

And a few hours later i was back on the playground.



Of course this is Denmark where you will see kindergarten kids 20 feet up in a tree, and thats just fine, ASO ASO

Though nowadays there are rubber granulate on the ground of playgrounds, when i was a kid we was lucky if there was grass, but mostly it was just dirt.

bygger1.1651271604.jpg


bygger2.1651271610.jpg

 
Working construction you get to see all kinds of things like this. Whenever people are in a hurry, tired, distracted, etc, things can go really wrong really fast. In addition to safety protocols like not keeping ammo in the same room as the gun you're working on, and having multiple methods of checking to ensure that you're not loaded, I now check to make sure that I'm doing what I'm doing with my full wits. Im not watching tv, or talking to somebody, or doing work late at night or whatever.

I learned to do this after I shot a hole in the wall of my bedroom from 3 ft away.... No one was hurt, but my ears rang for a while...
 
Last summer I was troubleshooting my 1990's Beeman RS1000 break-barrel. I VERY stupidly forgot that the barrel would slam closed when the trigger is pulled.

Anyway - I digress. I cried from my stupidity, not the pain. Pass this on to anyone you know who doesn't take break-barrels seriously.

This is the main reason I picked up an Air Venturi Avenger and loving it!

Ponz

1.1651249140.jpg
2.1651249163.jpg

“Air guns are toys” 😂

Glad it healed well and didn’t get infected and lose the finger.

Great reminder that “Air guns are not toys”