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6. Dress properly. Do not wear loose clothing or jewellery. Keep your hair and clothing away from moving parts. Loose clothes,
jewellery or long hair can be caught in movingparts.
7. If devices are provided for the connection of dust extraction and collection facilities, ensure these are connected and properly
used. Use of dust collection can reduce dust-related hazards.
8. Do not let familiarity gained from frequent use of tools allow you to become complacentand ignore tool safety principles. A
careless action can cause severe injury within a fraction of a second.
9. Always wear protective goggles to protect your eyes from injury when using power tools. The goggles must comply with ANSI
Z87.1 in the USA, EN 166 in Europe, or AS/NZS1336in Australia/New Zealand. In Australia/NewZealand, it is legally required
to wear a face shield to protect your face, too.
It is an employer's responsibility to enforce the use of appropriate safety protective equipments by the tool operators and by other
persons in the immediate workingarea.
Power tool use and care
1. Do not force the power tool. Use the correct power tool for your application. The correct power tool will do the job better and
safer at the rate for which it wasdesigned.
2. Do not use the power tool if the switch does not turn it on and off. Any power tool that cannot be controlled with the switch
is dangerous and must berepaired.
3. Disconnect the plug from the power source and/or remove the battery pack, if detachable, from the power tool before making
any adjustments, changing accessories, or storing power tools. Such preventive safety measures reduce the risk of starting the
power toolaccidentally.
4. Store idle power tools out of the reach of children and do not allow persons unfamiliar with the power tool or these instructions
to operate the power tool. Power tools are dangerous in the hands of untrainedusers.
KEEP WORKiNG
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