mckutzy
Well-known member
OH I see. ya that theory of the loose glove and spinning machines, I see where your going at.
The reason my previous work allowed to use gloves on the big belt, was we mainly ground stuff on the big wheel end, not on the flat portion. Also The wheel spins down to the floor, so if the belt caught the work, it flies to the ground.
So yes this is kinda of a grey area as to a safer operation, aswell as skill in use of the machines.
A flip side....IMO I would never wear gloves when grinding a tungsten for a tig torch, way to easy to catch the wheel or get the sharp rod through you hand.
The reason my previous work allowed to use gloves on the big belt, was we mainly ground stuff on the big wheel end, not on the flat portion. Also The wheel spins down to the floor, so if the belt caught the work, it flies to the ground.
So yes this is kinda of a grey area as to a safer operation, aswell as skill in use of the machines.
A flip side....IMO I would never wear gloves when grinding a tungsten for a tig torch, way to easy to catch the wheel or get the sharp rod through you hand.



