SawTroll
Information Collector
I know I joke around a lot but on a serious note, these threads have convinced me to buy a good pair of chaps. I'm not gonna cut again until I have a good pair.
Is that shredded bone??? Fat???
Fat.
I know I joke around a lot but on a serious note, these threads have convinced me to buy a good pair of chaps. I'm not gonna cut again until I have a good pair.
Is that shredded bone??? Fat???
In addition to all the other comments.
I have never tried wearing a pair of those but from watching catchers, etc they look like they would be...welll....err.. clumsy and bulky. Chaps on the other hand aren't even noticeable once you start wearing them.
Harry K
just a few things, first to the thread starter: don't reinvent the wheel, chaps are specifically designed to stop a very fast sharp chainsaw chain from removing parts of your body that, in hindsight, you would have rather kept intact.
and I've seen a good many chainsaw cuts over the (20) years and I never saw anthing that looked like that cut. I may be wrong, but thats no chinsaw cut to me. the ripping and shredding looks more like a combine accident where many tines grab and rip and shred the meat. a chainsaw is more of a cut/rip that ends up going sideways (usually) and cuts a flap. hard to describe, but its more of a straight in type cut with ragged edges, not a total destruction of a 12" swath down to 3 inches deep.
but hey, I wasn't there, so I could be wrong, but thats not a typical looking chainsaw cut.
-Ralph
Well, if not catcher's shin guards, what about something like this?
and I've seen a good many chainsaw cuts over the (20) years and I never saw anthing that looked like that cut. I may be wrong, but thats no chinsaw cut to me. the ripping and shredding looks more like a combine accident where many tines grab and rip and shred the meat. a chainsaw is more of a cut/rip that ends up going sideways (usually) and cuts a flap. hard to describe, but its more of a straight in type cut with ragged edges, not a total destruction of a 12" swath down to 3 inches deep.
but hey, I wasn't there, so I could be wrong, but thats not a typical looking chainsaw cut.
royta, I like kidding around as much as the next guy, but this thread is not the place for it.
I've never seen a chainsaw cut, so I'm only speculating here. Could this have been the result of a trip & fall scenario where the chain swept along the shin? As opposed to (what I presume is) the more usual cut where the chain is moving more directly into the leg?
I know a lot about that, I know people who been cut badly. An older girlfriend of me cut off to and a half finger. She was lucky, was "only" the fingers. But she live all her life with "fantom" pains.
You shall have all the respect for the chainsaw, all happend so fast so you don't understand it. Take care!
.... I may be wrong, but thats no chainsaw cut to me. ...
I also took note of that, we need an explanation or elaboration about that wound......
I've never seen a chainsaw cut, so I'm only speculating here. Could this have been the result of a trip & fall scenario where the chain swept along the shin? As opposed to (what I presume is) the more usual cut where the chain is moving more directly into the leg?
from what I've seen, no. it would enter and skin a body part, hence my "cut a flap" comment. even a saw too dull to cut wood properly has no trouble with flesh and bone.
for that F/X staged pic, imo, the saw would have entered and traveled upward removing the kneecap and continue on into the quads where it would probably come out, removing the kneecap and a large chunk (flap) of meat and hide.
but I agree with SRT too, ok, it was staged, but it was staged and summarily posted here with the very good intention of making someone realize the severity of what could happen, if that makes 100 people mad and saves one guy from a life altering injury, it's worth it imo.
-Ralph
allright allright...... i was trying to make a point about wearing chainsaw PPE.
seeing as a few of you have noticed it.......that pic is from a "staged" trauma training course. The injury was simulated by a special FX/makeup crew with cheescake, twinkies, stage blood, and gelatin. The wound was staged to look like a saw user that fell onto his sawbar while still holding the trigger, hence the "cut and sweep" nature of the injury.
Again, sorry to do it, but i was trying to convince the Original Poster that chainsaw PPE is the only acceptable PPE for running a saw/brushcutter, instead of sports gear).
sometimes a little gore (and i aint talking about that hypocrite AL) is needed to impress the need for PROPER safety gear.
slag away at me for fooling some of ya, its all good.
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