Mariosehr
Well-Known Member
No gloves is just the way to go.Oh that’s the best part, looking at your hands all cut up and finished work lmao
No gloves is just the way to go.Oh that’s the best part, looking at your hands all cut up and finished work lmao
Only if we know OSHA Is around bud.Do you guys wear harnesses?
I’m big on flashing myself
AlwaysDo you guys wear harnesses?
I’m big on flashing myself
Damn it. When I get into saw, grinder, or nail gun. Just seems like a dumb idea for shades or safety googles. Always end up with dust or something...stay safe buf.
Funny thing. I wasn't the one cutting.... Someone was operating a circ saw about 6 feet away from me.Damn it. When I get into saw, grinder, or nail gun. Just seems like a dumb idea for shades or safety googles. Always end up with dust or something...stay safe buf.
I’d say we gear up on pitches 9/12 and up.Always
DangFunny thing. I wasn't the one cutting.... Someone was operating a circ saw about 6 feet away from me.
"falls"... Yikes..I’d say we gear up on pitches 9/12 and up.
Especially above a 12. Looking back at all the falls, they were usually under a 7/12
Slips really. Just being careless."falls"... Yikes..
That early morning frost is what I always fear.Slips really. Just being careless.
Bullseye. Well the worst is the big houses you gotta come back the next day to nail on,wet synthetic underlayment or frost.That early morning frost is what I always fear.
I borrowed one of these from my buddy. Worth their weight in gold.Any tips for putting up large ceiling panels by yourself?
Union Lather here since ‘93. Drywall, lath, metalstud framer. UBCNo gloves is just the way to go.
A nail banger dude I knew lost an eye. Nail got em right in the eyeball. He immediatey pulled it out and it oozed. The same guy broke his back falling off some exterior scaffolding.
I’ve never seen one of those things out on a jobsite. We usually hang lids from scaffolding(rolling or fixed) or from lifts. We use our heads to hold it up at first. This is where hard hats are usefull.That lift you can also rent for like 30 bucks a days, totally worth it. We've used them to help install drywall in apartment complexes. Dead useful, mostly on the ceiling, but yeah..