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I would think if you went in feet first you would pass out pretty quick, the brain would shut you down.
But, I have always wondered if, when the French would use the big blade to cut your head off, would it hurt that split second when your nose hit the bottom of the basket? |
I knew a guy that fell into a wood chipper and lost his left arm and left leg. He's all right now.
Ohhhhh that was bad. Shame on me. |
Maybe he was helped to fall into the chipper.
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I saw a movie once where the bad guys had a big vat of acid. They would slowly lower people into it with an overhead crane. I wonder which would be worse.
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Ashes to ashes and sawdust to sawdust... |
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It happens more than you know.
TUESDAY, Aug. 15, 2006, 9:32 p.m. By Bob Purvis Man killed in wood chipper accident A 30-year-old man was killed this afternoon when he was sucked into a wood chipper while trying to shake loose a piece of wood that had jammed it. The man owned a tree service company working in the 8900 block of 26th Ave. in Pleasant Prairie, according to a Pleasant Prairie Police Department press release. The man was using his foot to clear debris that had jammed the wood chipper around 5:20 p.m. when his foot became entangled in the machine, witnesses told police. His coworkers tried to rescue him from the intake, but he was pulled into and through the wood chipper, according to the release. The incident remains under investigation by Pleasant Prairie detectives, the Kenosha County Medical Examiner's office and officials from the Occupational Safety and Health Administration. Police withheld the man's name while they attempted to notify his family. |
Injury Associated with Working Near
or Operating Wood Chippers Description of Hazard According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) Census of Fatal Occupational Injuries (CFOI), 11 workers lost their lives during 1992 through 1997 while working near mobile wood chippers. In seven of the incidents, the victim was caught by the feed mechanism and pulled through the chipper knives. The victims in four of the incidents were struck by hoods (guards that cover the rotating chipper knives) that separated from the machines after being improperly opened or closed while knives were still rotating. During 1998, the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) received two additional reports of worker deaths from operating wood chippers. These incidents illustrate the two most common causes of fatal injury: being fed through the chipper knives or being struck by the chipper disc hood. The incidents were investigated as part of the NIOSH Fatality Assessment and Control Evaluation (FACE) program. |
They have trees in Ingle-hood?
When did this happen? |
AP) A man trimming trees was killed after he apparently was pulled into a wood chipper, police said.
The tree-service employee died Wednesday while he and a co-worker were cutting branches at a Loveland residence, Police Sgt. Rae Bontz said. "It appears he was pulled into the chipper," Bontz said. He described the death as an industrial accident but released no other details, saying police were investigating. After the accident, the man's partner, who was cutting branches from a bucket on a hydraulic lift, ran to the house where they were working, and a resident called emergency services. The victim was pronounced dead at the scene. Police did not release either man's name. Police Chief Luke Hecker said the victim was experienced at his work. The Larimer County coroner and the federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration also are investigating. |
A 19-year-old San Jose man died Sunday morning when he accidentally fell into a wood chipper while working on a tree-trimming crew near North First Street and Highway 237.
San Jose fire officials said that at about 11 a.m. Miguel Marquez of San Jose was standing on the tailgate of the wood chipper machine when some tree debris got stuck in the chute. As Marquez tried to kick the jammed wood through the chute, both his feet and legs were pulled into the high-powered thrasher. He bled to death of massive injuries. ``He was sucked into the shredder,'' said Capt. Allison Cabral of the San Jose Fire Department. ``By the time our crew got to him he was dead.'' Cabral said Marquez, who has family in Mexico and a father in the San Jose area, was part of a three-person crew. His co-workers were clearing branches in a tree at the time and did not see the accident. They immediately called 911 from a cell phone, but cell phone calls to 911 are routed through the California Highway Patrol offices in Vallejo, and such calls do not automatically inform dispatchers of locations. Law enforcement officials advise residents to program the numbers of their local police and fire departments into their cell phones in case of emergencies. ``They called 911, and the fire department went out there as quickly as they could, but the young man was pronounced dead at the scene,'' said Sgt. Steve Dixon of the San Jose Police Department. ``It was very tragic, and the men on the work crew were pretty shaken up.'' Cabral said Marquez worked for a tree-trimming company called Ag Science, and the crew was working outside of Novellus Systems at First Street and Vista Montana. A spokesman at Cal-OSHA's Fremont office said the agency would investigate. Marquez's family |
There was a murder a few years ago like that except I think she was dead before her husband put her through the chipper. He shot the particles out into a pond to hide the evidence. They nailed his ass anyway:D
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I think the guys name was Richard Craft and it was in CT, he had rented a chipper and ran her through it, then cleaned it real well and returned it.:D
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Anyone have his wifes phone number?
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Holy Crap...that gives me the creeps!! JA |
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In England, deaf people were sometimes said to read the lips of the executed to record the last "words". |
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