To Reduce The Risk Of Injury From Jams, Slips Or Thrown Pieces Or Broken Blades; Plan Ahead To Protect Your Eyes, Hands, Face And Ears - RIDGID BS1400 El Manual Del Propietario

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Safety Instructions For Band Saw (continued)

To Reduce The Risk Of Injury From Jams, Slips Or Thrown Pieces Or Broken Blades

Inspect your blade.
• Choose the right blade size, style and cutting speed for
the material and the type of cutting you plan to do.
• Make sure the blade teeth point downward, toward the
table.
• Make sure the blade guides and thrust bearings are
properly adjusted.
• Make sure the blade tension is properly adjusted.
• Make sure the bevel clamp is tight and no parts have
excessive play.
• To reduce the risk of accidental blade contact, mini-
mize blade breakage and provide maximum blade sup-
port, always adjust the upper blade guide and blade
guard to just clear the workpiece.
Inspect your work area.
• Keep work area clean.
• Cluttered areas and benches invite accidents. Floor
must not be slippery from wax or sawdust.
• To reduce the risk of burns or other fire damage, never
use the saw near flammable liquids, vapors or gases.
Plan your work
• Use the right tool. Don't force tool or attachment to do
a job it was not designed to do.
• Use this band saw to cut only wood, wood like prod-
ucts and plastics.
CAUTION: To reduce the risk of blade breakage,
fire or other damage to the saw, NEVER use this
band saw to cut metals.
• Know your saw. Read and understand the owner's
manual and labels affixed to the tool. Learn its applica-

Plan Ahead To Protect Your Eyes, Hands, Face and Ears

Dress for safety
• Any power saw can throw foreign objects into the eyes.
This can result in permanent eye damage. Always
wear safety goggles, not glasses, complying with ANSI
Z87.1 (or in Canada CSA Z94.3-99) shown on pack-
age. Everyday eyeglasses have only impact resistant
lenses. They are not safety glasses. Safety goggles
are available at many local retail stores. Glasses or
goggles not in compliance with ANSI or CSA could
seriously hurt you when they break.
• For dusty operations, wear a dust mask along with
safety goggles.
• Do not wear loose clothing, gloves, neckties or jewelry
(rings, wrist watches). They can get caught and draw
you into moving parts.
tion and limitations as well as the specific potential
hazards peculiar to this tool.
• To reduce the risk of injury from accidental contact with
moving parts, don't do layout, assembly, or set up work
on the saw while any parts are moving.
• Reduce the Risk of accidental starting. Make sure
switch is "OFF" before plugging saw into a power outlet.
Inspect your workpiece.
• Make sure there are no nails or foreign objects in the
part of the workpiece to be cut.
Use extra caution with large, very small or awkward
workpieces:
• Use extra supports (tables, saw horses, blocks, etc.)
for any workpieces large enough to tip when not held
down to the table top.
• NEVER use another person as a substitute for a table
extension, or as additional support for a workpiece that
is longer or wider than the basic saw table, or to help
feed, support or pull the workpiece.
• When cutting irregularly shaped workpieces, plan your
work so it will not slip and pinch the blade. A piece of
molding for example, must lie flat or be held by a fixture
of jig that will not let it twist, rock or slip while being cut.
• Properly support round material such as dowel rods, or
tubing. They have a tendency to roll during a cut, caus-
ing the blade to "bite". To reduce the risk of this, always
use a "V" block or clamp the work to the miter gage.
• Cut only one workpiece at a time.
• Clear everything except the workpiece and related
support devices off the table before turning the saw on.
• Wear nonslip footwear.
• Tie back long hair.
• Roll long sleeves above the elbow.
• Noise levels vary widely. To reduce the risk of possible
hearing damage, wear ear plugs or muffs when using
saw for hours at a time.
Plan the way you will hold the workpiece from start to
finish.
• Do not hand hold pieces so small that your fingers will
go under the blade guard. Use jigs or fixtures to hold
the work and keep your hands away from the blade.
• Secure work. Use clamps to hold work when practical.
It's often safer than using your hand, and frees both
hands to operate the tool.
• Don't overreach. Keep good footing and balance.
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