Worst Injury by a Copier

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  • cobiray
    Passing Duplication Xpert

    1,000+ Posts
    • Mar 2008
    • 1199

    #1

    Worst Injury by a Copier

    One of the other techs ran my foot over with a huge Toshiba we picked up and it turned my instep a gnarly purple color. I just wondered what are some of the bad or interesting or whatever injuries you've sustained from a copier.

    I'll start. I had a few broken fingers from an out of control doc feeder on a Minolta di450. The weirdest one was slicing the tip of my finger off while cleaning the optics on a di620. I must have caught the edge of a mirror and it just came right off. The worst part was the newbie doctor (or intern) who stitched me up. He bent two needles before going to a heavier gauge. By this time the local anesthesia had worn off so every time he sewed I could feel the needle pop through the skin. It looked very "frankenstein" too.
    Attached Files
    the savin2535 is displaying well bet the hiter lamp is not shining and the lamp had been tested o.k.please kindly help.
    Samir: No, not again. I... why does it say paper jam when there is no paper jam? I swear to God, one of these days, I just kick this piece of shit out the window.
    Michael Bolton: You and me both, man. That thing is lucky I'm not armed.
  • mjarbar

    #2
    Ouch!!!

    Somehow grazed shin's and fingers caught between DADF's and the platern reader seem rather insignificant now...

    My worst was when I nearly cut my nuts off when I slipped off the back of a lorry. One leg slipped off the back whilst the other stayed on!!! I landed up against the guide used for the roller shutter which was only a couple of steel plates. I cut through my trousers to my leg underneath but luckerly missed the family jewels by 3/4's of an inch...

    Not really a copier injury but I was loading them at the time, so it might count. Apart from that the only thing I have found is that you can't work on a Canon GP215 without spilling blood somewhere.

    Comment

    • blackcat4866
      Master Of The Obvious

      Site Contributor
      10,000+ Posts
      • Jul 2007
      • 22930

      #3
      You probably already read about mine in other posts.

      The most painful by far was when I was chasing a noise/vibration in the back of a Mita DC-3285. I had my right forefinger on the end of the registration shaft and had decided that it was definitely a registration clutch problem. About that moment a young lady tapped me on the shoulder, and when I turned to look the cast iron registration clutch hub grabbed hold of my finger and chewed most of the flesh off to the first knuckle. Fortunately it pulled a main drive motor error so the motor stopped, but it took 4 hard yanks to take what was left of my finger back from the drive train. It all grew back, just not quite as pretty as it used to be.

      I had a memorable learning experience with the Mita 900D. As a newbie I had the habit of cleaning corona wires with my forefinger (same one!) and a little spit. To my great surprise the 900D uses a primary razor blade! Only halfway down its length I hit bone. (I did learn from that experience, while bleeding all over my dress shirt.)

      Then there was the Toshiba BD1310. Like all moving tabletop machines, I left the cable attached and just tipped the glass back against the wall. I turned around to get a towel then heard the machine rolling away on the smooth tile. In one swift motion I grabbed the glass just as it was shattering into many sharp pieces. Fortunately for me there was a volunteer paramedic working in the tool room that did a great job of cleaning up the cuts. This makes for interesting conversation when visiting the palm reader. They have a hard time explaining all those craggy lines across my palms. =^..^=
      If you'd like a serious answer to your request:
      1) demonstrate that you've read the manual
      2) demonstrate that you made some attempt to fix it.
      3) if you're going to ask about jams include the jam code.
      4) if you're going to ask about an error code include the error code.
      5) You are the person onsite. Only you can make observations.

      blackcat: Master Of The Obvious =^..^=

      Comment

      • pspahr
        Toner Schlep

        100+ Posts
        • May 2008
        • 227

        #4
        Repost from earlier thread

        Posted this in an earlier thread, takes too long to retype:

        Originally posted by pspahr
        About 10 years ago I was at an account which, luckily, was a hospital. I was working on a Ricoh FT8680. Those machines had a thing about jamming fairly regularly if nothing had been done to them in a while. Of course they'd get a delay jam, the customer would open the drawer, and they'd shred a sheet of paper in the feed unit inlet guide. Occassionally another sheet of paper would get behind the drawer (still happens even on new equipment) and get crammed into the drawer connector.....

        Well on this day that had occurred. The machine was a big thing (ran 11x17 LEF) and they had it in a virtual closet. Literally just wide and deep enough to fit in the room. Opening the front doors would touch the opposing wall. Well, I shut off the copier, pulled out the tray, got down on my back and with hemostats in hand, went to pull out the paper from the connector.....forgetting that the tray heaters come on when the main power was shut off. 100Vac across the two pins in the connector and my hemostats completed that connection.

        I already had a bum shoulder from a previous accident (running network cabling) and this posistion my body was in and my reaction to the shock easily dislocated my shoulder again. Picture now if you will a man, on his back, one shoulder touching a wall, the other deep inside a machine, screaming, in a hospital. Had I been watching I'd have laughed my azz off, certainly. Luckily, the nurses who got there first were much more professional (in other words they waited to laugh when I couldn't see). Anyway, to get out of the copier they had to roll me ONTO the dislocated shoulder in order to allow my arm to come out of the machine due to the confined space.

        Anyway, no matter the pain it caused, physically and mentally, I still loved those old FT8680/90/8780/90 machines. I must be in a world of my own.
        VectorLinux---Check it out!

        Comment

        • redime

          #5
          [


          All the way down to the bone, avulsion fracture - basically my muscle was so tight it pulled a piece of my bone out, chipped elbow... and im still having nerve issues from time to time
          Last edited by Guest; 09-25-2008, 02:34 AM. Reason: forgot to add something

          Comment

          • E Winter

            #6
            ooouuchh.....

            I can't report any major injuries from my side. But I remember that I was asked to take a look at a copier wich I wasn't familiar. Well, kind of "last minute" action, some paper was stucked behind a LCT magazin and I tried to access it with my bare hands/arms. It was a very tight way but finally I was able to fetch it - unfortunately some plates weren't proper deburred so during the way back I earned myself a few cuts.

            Comment

            • DadO
              Trusted Tech

              Site Contributor
              250+ Posts
              • Dec 2007
              • 401

              #7
              Few scratches and burns from time to time but main injury was when i cleaned an drum cleaner from bizhub 500. I usualy take an small cloth and glide across cleaner whit my thumb.

              In one moment someone asked me something and i turned my head away.When i looked again I saw that cleaner was stuck oround 1 cm in my thumb and cloth was slipped from it ...then i started to feel a pain.......

              p.s.
              couldn't believe that gum can hurt u till then

              Comment

              • 10871087
                Service Manager

                1,000+ Posts
                • Jan 2005
                • 1143

                #8
                Originally posted by cobiray
                He bent two needles before going to a heavier gauge. By this time the local anesthesia had worn off so every time he sewed I could feel the needle pop through the skin. It looked very "frankenstein" too.

                Thanks dude, I just about tossed my lunch. Did you finish the call?

                Comment

                • cobiray
                  Passing Duplication Xpert

                  1,000+ Posts
                  • Mar 2008
                  • 1199

                  #9
                  No I didn't finish. I tried to apply pressure but it required a bit more than basic first aid to fix up. Hence the 8 or so stitches. There was a pool of blood under the mirror carriage that one of the other techs came out to clean up while I was at the ER.
                  the savin2535 is displaying well bet the hiter lamp is not shining and the lamp had been tested o.k.please kindly help.
                  Samir: No, not again. I... why does it say paper jam when there is no paper jam? I swear to God, one of these days, I just kick this piece of shit out the window.
                  Michael Bolton: You and me both, man. That thing is lucky I'm not armed.

                  Comment

                  • 10871087
                    Service Manager

                    1,000+ Posts
                    • Jan 2005
                    • 1143

                    #10
                    Originally posted by cobiray
                    No I didn't finish... ...one of the other techs came out to clean up while I was at the ER.

                    Typical Minolta Tech Just kidding bro, that looked like a pretty harsh cut. I'm glad your still with us.

                    Comment

                    • +ve charge
                      Technician

                      50+ Posts
                      • May 2008
                      • 87

                      #11
                      Thought i'll add my 2 cents... During my tenderfoot days (not that i've progressed very far now ) i was fixing the second of the 2 fusing unit springs on a FT5632. Enaged the bottom and the tug was on to engage the top when the spring slipped and the resulting momentum carried the nose plier into my eye. Needed stitches on my cornea. Was told that i was lucky not to suffer permanent damage.

                      Comment

                      • blackcat4866
                        Master Of The Obvious

                        Site Contributor
                        10,000+ Posts
                        • Jul 2007
                        • 22930

                        #12
                        Ouch! =^..^=
                        If you'd like a serious answer to your request:
                        1) demonstrate that you've read the manual
                        2) demonstrate that you made some attempt to fix it.
                        3) if you're going to ask about jams include the jam code.
                        4) if you're going to ask about an error code include the error code.
                        5) You are the person onsite. Only you can make observations.

                        blackcat: Master Of The Obvious =^..^=

                        Comment

                        • Scott_Lewis
                          Senior Tech

                          500+ Posts
                          • Mar 2007
                          • 519

                          #13
                          Originally posted by +ve charge
                          Was told that i was lucky not to suffer permanent damage.
                          Ouch. Reminds me of when my brother was playing with my hunting knife when we were kids. He stuck the tip into his eye. To this day his pupil is shaped like a keyhole from where the iris was damaged.

                          Comment

                          • Scott_Lewis
                            Senior Tech

                            500+ Posts
                            • Mar 2007
                            • 519

                            #14
                            Revenge of the discarded copier

                            We regularly take old copiers to the local landfill for disposal. Back when I was new to the company I and a coworker were unloading a few out the back of our Dodge van. This one machine had been stripped of any useable parts and was missing the covers on all sides. A few copiers had already been pushed out behind the van, so I was working at pushing the last one onto the top of the pile. Somehow, the machine rotated with me pushing pretty hard to get it out the back. Something on it sliced the outside of my small finger and left me with a 1.5 inch slice that bled like it was the carotid arteries in my neck.

                            Needless to say, I wear gloves for this task, now.


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