new guy with nine fingers

Collapse
This topic is closed.
X
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • 1index only
    Forum Newbie
    • Feb 2006
    • 39

    new guy with nine fingers

    Hi all name is Bill and yep you got it! only nine I got a used bt3k and was using it improperly obviously when I pushed my right hand directly into blade. Two cuts to the thumb and an index finger split down the center, literally made two out of one! well it didn't heal up correctly so back in Dec had the doc lopp it off inside the hand, no longer have an index finger at all. Oh well its not too bad, I can still write with it and do most everything else. I foung this site looking for a pair of rails cause mine are gone, figured I say HI!
  • MBG
    Senior Member
    • Apr 2003
    • 945
    • Chicago, Illinois.
    • Craftsman 21829

    #2
    Sorry to hear of your injury, but, please change you user name (I'll cringe every time I see it).

    Comment

    • 1index only
      Forum Newbie
      • Feb 2006
      • 39

      #3
      figured it fit

      Comment

      • 91FE
        Established Member
        • Dec 2005
        • 303
        • Philadelphia (actually Souderton), PA.

        #4
        WOW
        I like Wagoneers too. Hey...they've got wood

        Comment

        • Pappy
          The Full Monte
          • Dec 2002
          • 10453
          • San Marcos, TX, USA.
          • BT3000 (x2)

          #5
          Welcome to the Asylum, Bill! You should fit right in!
          Don, aka Pappy,

          Wise men talk because they have something to say,
          Fools because they have to say something.
          Plato

          Comment

          • ddamoore
            Established Member
            • Jun 2003
            • 225
            • Oklahoma City, OK, USA.
            • Craftsman (Ridgid 3612 Clone)

            #6
            Welcome aboard Bill.

            Seems to me there are a few posts about a red line around in here somewhere...oh wait...sorry, to late for that.

            (Sorry, couldn't resist)
            Dennis

            "Everybody is ignorant, only on different subjects" - Will Rogers

            Comment

            • Otter
              Senior Member
              • Nov 2003
              • 865
              • Cumming, GA, USA.
              • Delta Left Tilt UniSaw

              #7
              Welcome, welcome....try to keep the rest of the digits.
              All men dream, but not equally. Those who dream by night in the dusty recesses of their minds wake in the day to find that it was vanity: but the dreamers of the day are dangerous men, for they may act their dream with open eyes, to make it possible

              T.E. Lawrence

              Comment

              • John Hunter
                Veteran Member
                • Dec 2004
                • 2034
                • Lake Station, IN, USA.
                • BT3000 & BT3100

                #8
                Welcome aboard!
                John Hunter

                Comment

                • axio
                  Established Member
                  • Feb 2005
                  • 459
                  • Castro Valley, CA, USA.
                  • BT3100-1

                  #9
                  Whoa, sorry to hear that. I hope you keep the rest of em.... look into a Sharkguard, best $100 you could ever spend. Seriously.

                  Comment

                  • lcm1947
                    Veteran Member
                    • Sep 2004
                    • 1490
                    • Austin, Texas
                    • BT 3100-1

                    #10
                    Man, that's a bad deal. Sorry to hear it happened to you or anybody for that matter. Man! Anyway, welcome to the forum and may that be the worst you ever have to experience in this life time. Take care and be seeing you around.
                    May you die and go to heaven before the Devil knows you're dead. My Best, Mac

                    Comment

                    • oldninefingers
                      Forum Newbie
                      • Jan 2003
                      • 40
                      • Patriot, Indiana, USA.

                      #11
                      well my wife calls me "oldninefingers"

                      when ever I head off to the shop as a joke...I think... I do still have all ten digits
                      Tod

                      Comment

                      • jdschulteis
                        Established Member
                        • Mar 2003
                        • 139
                        • Muskego, Wisconsin, USA.
                        • Ryobi BT3100

                        #12
                        Hi Bill! Sorry about your finger, glad you're getting on without it. You must love woodworking to be sticking with it. I have a coworker who quit the hobby--he mauled his left index and middle fingers, best the docs could do was attach the middle finger tip to the index stub, leaving him with a middle stub and a short index finger.

                        So, we know about your finger. What happened to your rails?

                        --
                        Jerry
                        Jerry

                        Comment

                        • jgrobler
                          Established Member
                          • Dec 2005
                          • 259
                          • Salinas, CA, USA.
                          • TS3650

                          #13
                          Originally posted by axio
                          Whoa, sorry to hear that. I hope you keep the rest of em.... look into a Sharkguard, best $100 you could ever spend. Seriously.
                          How would a Sharkguard prevent this, as opposed to the standard guard?

                          Comment

                          • gmack5
                            Veteran Member
                            • Dec 2002
                            • 1973
                            • Quapaw, Oklahoma, USA.
                            • Ryobi BT3000SX & BT3100

                            #14
                            Congratulations on the acquisition of your BT3100 and welcome to the "family".

                            One of the first things you need to do, after you get your BT3100 Saw assembled is, following your Owner's Manual, go thru the entire set-up proceedure, step by step, in the sequence laid out in the Manual. Each set up proceedure builds on the one before it, so you MUST keep them in sequence.

                            Usually the Saw is set up properly, right out of the box, but you should still check it as this gets you familiar with all the adjustments on the saw and assures you that everything is as it should be.

                            Here's some free plans that'll keep you busy for a while. http://www.woodworkersworkshop.com/r...ex.php?cat=102

                            And here's some additional information about your Saw that you may find useful.

                            Regardless of what you've read or others have told you, NEVER NEVER use any wax or lubricant on your saw that contains Silicone, this includes all automobile waxes and polishes and most spray-on furniture polishes. The reason is simple, most of them contain Silicones and they will make your projects difficult to finish.
                            Silicones repell liquid, making "fish eyes" in your finishes, this will force you to remove the Silicones from your project and start over. That stuff (Silicone) migrates all over every where, don't ask me how, it just does. If you put it in one place, eventually it will be all over the entire saw.

                            Your best bet is to use a "dry" lubricant, such as Teflon (PTFE), Powdered Graphite, or Candle Wax for the Raising/Lowering and Tilt mechanisms below the table top.

                            Then use either Johnson's Paste Wax, Minwax's "Finishing Wax" or Butcher's Wax on the working surfaces, table tops (All three of them) and the Rip Fence.

                            Do NOT Wax the Front and Rear rails or the Miter Fence. As a mater of fact, you may want to glue 220 grit sand-paper to the front face of the Miter Fence, cause you don't WANT things to slide on there.

                            Something you might think about is the use of a set of Draftsman's Triangles instead of the Carpenter's Square that they show in the Owner's Manual for setting up your saw.

                            An accurate Carpenter's Square is almost a myth!
                            A good one will cost you quite a bit of money, $40 - $75, or more. I would recommend that you consider using a pair of Draftsman's 30 -60 and 45 degree triangles instead. You'll find they're not near as expensive and are far more accurate than a run-of-the-mill Carpenter's Square. The 30 -60 triangle should have one 12" leg and the other leg would be 9" long. The 45 degree triangle should have at least 8" legs on either side of the 90 degree corner. That way either one can be put up against the side of the Saw Blade without touching the saw teeth.

                            Just remember, regardless of which measuring instrument you choose to use, check it(them) to be sure they're accurate. When checking the Miter Fence for Square to the Blade with a triangle, use the 12" 30-60, if possible.

                            One of the other "tricks" that I've discovered is to take a piece of "Wax" paper, fold it several times and rub it in the grooves that the "T" nuts that lock your Rails in place ride in. Makes the Rails move smooth as Butter.

                            Last, but not least, don't forget to paint the RED line!
                            It's a line that extends the line-of-sight from the saw blade to the front edge of the table to remind you NOT to let your Miter Fence or your FINGERS get in the way of the saw blade. Just put red paint, nail polish, or what ever, in the grove that extends towards the operator from the front edge of the saw blade.
                            Stop thinking why you can't and Start thinking how you CAN!
                            Remember, SUCCESS comes in CANS!
                            George

                            Comment

                            • monte
                              Forum Windbag
                              • Dec 2002
                              • 5242
                              • Paw Paw, MI, USA.
                              • GI 50-185M

                              #15
                              Welcome to the group.
                              Monte (another darksider)
                              Reporting Live from somewhere near Kalamazoo

                              http://community.webshots.com/user/monte49002

                              Comment

                              Working...