I show this video in all Excavation Training, Excellent job. This is what a Comp person is, if your company doesn't have an employee like this on every crew, its time for training.
Kind of confusing when you don’t show the entire crane and only show the load moving. It may be helpful to see the entire crane to get a better grasp on how the load is being held but also how the boom is moving as that is a movement I need to recognize.
I burned my fingers and hand 3 weeks ago. I was at home. The ER sent me to the burn center. It can happen anywhere that precautions aren't taken or you're not paying enough attention or in my case too hungry, in a hurry, not enough attention and on prescription pain meds, yes, as directed by my Dr. Sometimes, circumstances pile up. I can say this. Nothing like that will be happening to me again if I have anything to do with it. Also, when I was in 3rd grade, my outdoor folding chair broke and collapsed backwards with me in it. I, my 3 cousins and grandparents were roasting marshmallows around a little hibachi full of red hot coals. When my chair broke, I went backwards in it and my feet went under the grill taking it with me emptying all the contents onto my legs just barly missing my lap, I suppose I was lucky that the only scar is an inch from not being a thigh anymore. Those coals sank into my flesh. Grandma was burned too just from picking me up and getting me to the bathtub.The ER was over an hour away from their farm we were visiting that summer. I had 3rd degree burns my dad treated with pure aloe vera daily over the rest of the summer. I guess he missed the one high on the thigh. I'm not mad about it. Our scars remind us we are survivors. These scars from my recent cooking accident will remind me to pay better attention. I'm not going to beat myself up about it. I'm beat up enough as it is. Be care out there everyone. Check your floors, check your chairs, check where your attention is. Goodluck
yesterday I got in a accident where I was doing exactly this, we'll not exactly I took some hot oil in a container and someone bumped into me and all of the hot oil fell on me, thankfully the cooking jacket did save me alot and only my right hand and legs were burnt, not as bad as her oil was not fully hot it was bad enough to cause blisters but nothing deeper.
When i first saw this, i only saw the part where she falls and spills the pot, and i laughed my ass off. Now that I've seen the whole thing, i feel horrible for laughing as hard as i did. That scream might end up haunting my dreams
Something like that seems to easy to happen, like there should be another, safer way to move a big fucking pile of smoldering grease. Carrying something like that around like that just seems like something really stupid to do. So wouldn't the point of this commercial need to be something other than just be careful, but maybe also something like wheel something like that with a cart?
If you think this is real, why? You think if this happened in real life they'd make sure to get a close up on the guy in the back and her on the floor?
As a burn survivor myself I found this very disturbing yet acurate on how bad the pain was. Burn injuries are the WORST. You literally cannot think about anything else but the pain. I didnt suffer a grease burn i was involved in a gasoline explosion. Just the mere spark from a lighter ignited the fumes and BOOM! My T-shirt was instantly incinerated and my right arm was on fire was a good couple of seconds. Luckily I dove into a nearby pool. Lucky to be alive!
The comments are literally: 1- This is such a good psa for kitchen safety 2- I know it's fake, alright, but that scream was terrifying. Hope everyone who went through this comes out okay 3- Ahh, that's hot. That's hot.
Got to be the dumbest thing ive seen in over 20 yrs.. looks ideal for a back injury or hyrniya.. or better yet have ya off balance so you can fall in the hole... smh
This conversion of liquid water to water vapor (steam) is what you see when you're looking at a pot of boiling water. As we all know, for pure water at standard pressure (the air pressure that exists at sea level), the temperature at which this occurs is 212°F (100°C). So it will basically make you feel like your on fire but not as painful