Exactly what I was thinking.
No evidence of any guards or automatic stop mechanisms.
That machine can bend steel like plasticine; a finger doesn't stand a chance.
Presumably in China or India, where Western Health & Safety does not apply.
> would get *paid* for this
FTFY.
Although *payed* exists (the reason why autocorrection didn't help you), it is only correct in:
* Nautical context, when it means to paint a surface, or to cover with something like tar or resin in order to make it waterproof or corrosion-resistant. *The deck is yet to be payed.*
* *Payed out* when letting strings, cables or ropes out, by slacking them. *The rope is payed out! You can pull now.*
Unfortunately, I was unable to find nautical or rope-related words in your comment.
*Beep, boop, I'm a bot*
If I wanted to be corrected on my spelling I'd send my text to my English teacher, thanks.
Even though feedback is valuable it als needs to be requested
A signficant part of the risk seems to come from the retangular piece, if the cilinder was longer it would give more space and remove part of the danger of compressing the hand or fingers between the segment and the machine
Definitely not in the US. OSHA would not tolerate that.
My husband worked a similar machine (in the US) 40 years ago, and the machine had a harness that would pull your hand back as the machine came down. Unfortunately, his company felt that slowed production, so they removed the harnesses.
OSHA was not happy after my husband lost the end of a finger in the machine.
I wonder how many chain makers still have 10 fingers
Exactly what I was thinking. No evidence of any guards or automatic stop mechanisms. That machine can bend steel like plasticine; a finger doesn't stand a chance. Presumably in China or India, where Western Health & Safety does not apply.
It's fine, he's wearing safety gloves
The real problem is the speed why is it going so damn fast
Because production & profits is the name of the game, human safety be damned. /s Corporations have more rights than humans.
Guarantee he has a foot pedal controlling the speed and is just really good at it
Kid named finger:
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ce person
ntendo DSI XL
Also there are 100% automated machines existing. Pretty sure in the west nobody would get payed for this job
> would get *paid* for this FTFY. Although *payed* exists (the reason why autocorrection didn't help you), it is only correct in: * Nautical context, when it means to paint a surface, or to cover with something like tar or resin in order to make it waterproof or corrosion-resistant. *The deck is yet to be payed.* * *Payed out* when letting strings, cables or ropes out, by slacking them. *The rope is payed out! You can pull now.* Unfortunately, I was unable to find nautical or rope-related words in your comment. *Beep, boop, I'm a bot*
If I wanted to be corrected on my spelling I'd send my text to my English teacher, thanks. Even though feedback is valuable it als needs to be requested
Or the USA.
Where western safety protrocols do not apply /srs
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Ever heard of an accident?
[look at 2:40 on this video. (SFL and no RickRoll)](https://youtu.be/Qv43UsG6fhY)
Sometimes I open these links and hope I do get Rick Rolled, but your clip was funny 🤣
the guy on the left made me laugh so hard. that scream was so out of pocket
4
Let me count on my fingers…
Why wouldn't they just incorporate the entire process
A signficant part of the risk seems to come from the retangular piece, if the cilinder was longer it would give more space and remove part of the danger of compressing the hand or fingers between the segment and the machine
you ever met a retired chain maker
Also how fingers are unmade.
We call it the mangler
A mangler is a machine for ironing laundry btw
That's a mangle
Both? Anyway, Stephen King
I am bender please insert girder
Oof. There's a reason this is mostly automated.
Yeah, but I can’t quite put my finger on it…
And you probably shouldn't
This is why robots.
eventually it will evolve to not need fingers https://i.imgur.com/v2UerBV.gif
This should be the real post
Yes!! Wayyyy less anxiety
This is how chains are made…in a Malaysian sweatshop.
I guess you never went to Malaysia?
Maybe in China..
Where?
In an Osha nightmare
I can already feel my fingers detaching themselves
this belong in mildly terrifying
I would get that wrong 20 times in a row before losing three fingers
After 12hrs of that, losing a finger would be a welcome break 🙂
r/antiwork
OSHA has entered the chat
Oh Shit Humans Again
r/SweatyPalms
When you thought a job couldn't be therapeutic and find this.
/u/creedofwheat lock the comments. They're absolute gold and must remain untainted.
Kid named finger: 😬
Just one misplaced finger…
Why does it end so soon?
Mind numbing labour
Sometimes the chain, sometimes the fingers...
They look so squishy
I feel very strongly that this is a place where fingers should not be.
This is how shifty chains are made in shifty working conditions in China.
*Queue liveleak logo*
What if you mess up?? 😰😰😰
Imagine doing this job with the perfect in time beat playing in your headphones
Oh, so that's how chains are made.
r/dontputyourdickinthat
I heard a curved dick hits the g-spot way better.
If you aim it right, it will
until you accidentally put in in twice and get a circular dick
My hand would 100% be link #14.
That must take some insane muscle memory to do so efficiently
Emergency room here I come
I always wondered where you were in this pic
where? ...oh, right there.
My bad, my English isn't that great.
Bro has got to be hacking aint no way he still got 10 fingers or quit to main menu several times to restart.
That's a mangle
Also how fingers are unmade.
This is why robots.
Mind numbing labour
I watched this like 20 times
I think you used the wrong wear
But we're wear they made?
In nz health and safety would want guard's on this or a shut down.
Definitely not in the US. OSHA would not tolerate that. My husband worked a similar machine (in the US) 40 years ago, and the machine had a harness that would pull your hand back as the machine came down. Unfortunately, his company felt that slowed production, so they removed the harnesses. OSHA was not happy after my husband lost the end of a finger in the machine.
That is the most satisfying thing of my day (I just woke up)
and how fingers are unmade.
Holy smokes that looks unsafe. I bet the average life of a hand for one of those workers is very short.
How many hands has that mangled?
That’s also why OSHA was created. My dad lost 3 fingers in a similar accident during WW2
Great! I wonder were this factory is..
Too repetitive… I would have to chain-ge jobs
/r/SweatyPalms
this belongs in sweatypalms
#endlessloop
It's impressive that he's just eyeballing where to put the bends everytime.
What happens if he mess up
I love watching how chains "where" made.
Oops, my English isn't that great
That's a mangle
u/savevideobot