Category Archives: Health, Home, Property, Safety

Safety tip: Nail gun accident!

Power nail guns are quite dangerous, and even though they have a pretty good safety trigger, they are not accident-proof. One of the many ways you can get shot with a nail gun is for the gun to be too close to the edge of the board that is triggering it and for the nail to miss the board completely.

Over the holidays, someone that I personally know (whom I’m not going to identify, because they’re embarrassed enough as it is) accidentally shot a 10d nail into their arm near the wrist. The nail hit the bone and it actually bent the nail a little bit. Thankfully, the bone was not chipped or hurt in any way and this person made a quick recovery with only a slight bruising of their pride.

Nail in arm.
Photo of nail lodged in arm.
This photo was taken by a cell phone camera
on the way to the emergency room.

X-Ray of nail in arm. X-Ray of nail in arm.
Photos of x-rays from hospital.
No bone damage was found.
So please be careful with power nailers. A good safety precaution is to never put any part of your body anywhere near inline with the shooting path of a nail gun. Not even if there’s construction lumber in between!
Kurt

I’m a lab rat in a motion sickness study

I recently volunteered to be a test subject in a NASA/KSC study on motion sickness. I call it the “spinning chair of death” study for fun, but it’s really not too bad. Today was my turn in the chair and it was actually a breeze and I never even felt queezy. I guess I’m not very prone to motion sickness because I can count on one hand the total number of times I’ve ever felt motion sick.

Here are some details of the study:

The chair is actually a racing seat mounted on a wooden box. The wooden box holds all kinds of electronic gear (biological sensors) and a laptop PC powered by a car battery and an inverter. The wooden box is connected to a gearbox and a motor that spins it at 15 RPM’s or about 4 seconds per revolution. It’s not real fast. The whole contraption is also tilted from vertical 15 degrees. It’s this tilt combined with the rotation that gives your inner ear a real workout and causes most people to get motion sick.

After my test is complete.
Photo of me in the chair after my test was
complete and all the sensors were removed.

After filling out about 5 pages of medical history paperwork, the doc weighed me and then put 2 sets of EKG pads on my chest and side. One set was for local recording on the laptop PC that spun around along with the chair, and the other set was for wirelessly transmitting across the room so that the doctor could track my health during the test and stop the test if things went south. Then they sat me in the racing chair and strapped me in fairly snugly. It’s a pretty comfortable chair.

Then they hooked a constant blood pressure cuff on my left middle finger. This little cuff measures your blood pressure every single time your heart beats. It’s pretty cool. It inflates just like the standard cuffs do, but it pressure pulsates with your heartbeat and somehow the thing uses an infared beam or something to look at your blood flowing in your finger. I really don’t know how the thing works, but it’s a cool little device.

The last thing they hooked up to me was even cooler than the constant blood pressure cuff. It was a doppler blood flow sensor that was mounted against my right temple on my forehead. It’s just like the sonogram device a doctor uses to find the heartbeat of a fetus in the womb. And it sounds exactly like that, because they turned the sound up when they were installing the thing. They put this little helmet thing on my forehead and tightened it down snugly. Then they played around with the position of the doppler sensor on my temple until they found just the right artery and just the right position on that artery. The doctors and technicians were all crowded around the laptop watching the realtime plot waves while the sensor was being positioned. This sensor was difficult for them to get just right, but when they got it, it was rock solid … even when I moved my head around.

Then the doc gave me final instructions on the hand signals that I would be using during the test. Every minute during the test, the doc would ask me to rate my motion sickness symptoms on a scale from 1 to 5. With 1 being no symptoms, to 5 being “I think I’m gonna be sick so stop the test right now!”. Then they started the test with a 5 minute waiting baseline. I breathed deeply and tried to relax for the baseline measurements. 5 minutes is a long time when you’re waiting for it to pass in silence. They wanted all subjects to perform the rotating part with their eyes closed, so I closed mine for the baseline also.

Then the rotation started. It was to last 15 minutes or until I felt sick. Every minute the doc asked me to hold up fingers for my symptoms. For the first couple of minutes I felt like I was moving exactly as I knew I was moving. During the rotation, my body and head were being forced by gravity forward, to one side, backward, and then to the other side.

But then my brain kind of switched things around and it didn’t feel like I was spinning anymore. My head and body were still being pushed forward, to one side, backward, and then to the other side, but my brain made me feel like this motion was because I was being translated around on an air table and always facing the same direction. Imagine your hand on a hockey puck on an air table or on an ice rink. Now move (translate) the puck around in a large circle without rotating the actual puck. This is what I felt like I was doing now and it didn’t feel bad at all. As a matter of fact, I probably could have fallen asleep doing this if given another 15 minutes or so. After a while it was actually soothing. If my brain hadn’t switched me from feeling like I was rotating to feeling like I was just translating, I don’t know if I’d have made it.

After the 15 minutes were up, I had given them 15 motion sickness symptom scores of 1 with my hand signals and had no symptoms at all anywhere. No dizziness or anything going on in my stomach. During the last cycle, the chair slowed down and then finally stopped in the same position it started in. When it finally stopped completely, I felt my brain for just a couple of seconds continue to want to rotate and I’ll bet my head even twitched a couple of times towards the direction of rotation. But that passed after just a couple seconds and then I felt perfectly normal. They had another 5 minute period of waiting and then the test was complete.

The test was fun and I would do it again if given the opportunity. If I wasn’t having so much fun in my current organization, this department would actually be a pretty cool place to work. My buddy Dave works in this department and actually built the “rotating chair of death” and put together all the electronics that go with it.
Kurt

Mission style wall hanging mail holder

This was another case of seeing a product in a mail-order catalog and saying to myself, “I could make that, and it would cost me way less than 40 bucks!”

.01-mailholder.JPG .02-mailholder.JPG

I don’t really have a lot of details to talk about here. I saw this product, probably in an expensive Pottery Barn catalog or something. It was not a big deal to make. I just cut some boards to size, made rabbit joints and finish nailed them together. I put lots of coats of dark stain on it to get it as dark as I wanted it. I wish I would have made it about an inch wider, though. When we put magazines in it, they get rolled up at the bottom corner because the slot width gets skinnier at the bottom.

My magical disappearing workbench!

I designed, built, and installed this amazing disappearing workbench many many years ago when I first moved in to this house. I figure there might be someone out there who might be able to use this design for their own workbenches. First, lets look at the photos, then I’ll try to describe the design.

.01-disappearingworkbench.jpg .02-disappearingworkbench.jpg

You can see in the photos that there is a hinge on each leg of the workbench and also there are hinges along the back wall. So you just lift up the legs and the whole workbench swings down and against the wall and out of your way! Pretty cool, huh? I don’t have photos of the bench folded down because I rarely, if ever, actually fold mine down. I usually have too much stuff stored on top of it and also underneath it, so it’s not too convenient for me to fold mine down.

Basically, I created a box the size of the workbench top out of 2×4’s. Then I nailed some plywood to the box, then nailed a second piece of plywood just to make the top of the workbench extra tough. Then I mounted a 2×4 to the concrete block wall using some large heavy duty cement anchors and then connected the workbench top to the wall mounted 2×4 using heavy duty door hinges.

You can see in the second photo that I had to double up the box frame 2×4’s in the area where the legs are mounted to the box frame. The legs are mounted to this doubled up area using the same hinges. That’s about it. If I left out any important details, just email me using the link at the bottom of the page or reply to this blog entry and I will answer either way.

Kurt

Update: September 2012

Here are finally some more photos of the workbench design, including what it looks like when it is folded down.  I hope these photos show you how simple and awesome this workbench design is.

Kurt