UNIVERSITY PARK (Centre Co.) A number of Pennsylvania fanners lose fin gers, hands, arms, and even feel in com harvesting equipment each year. Some lose their lives. Neatly all of the accidents are preventable, but risk taking, carelessness, or lack of knowledge allow them to hap pen. Such tragedies can be pre vented, however, especially if farm wotkers understand the hazards these machines present and practice the safety precau tions needed to avoid them. Most serious com harvesting accidents involve either corn pickers or com combines. Because these machines per form similar tasks, the dangers that are related to their opera tion are similar, too. Bums, severe cuts, entrapment, and amputations are hazards of both. Compickers are usually involved in most severe com harvesting accidents, mainly because of their easily clogged gathering mechanisms. Char acteristically, compicking acci dents occur when the snapping rolls become plugged and the operator tries to remove debris or cornstalks while the machine is still running. As he tugs at a plugged stalk or weed, the snapping rolls suddenly free up and begin to roll, yanking stalks or weeds forward at nearly ten feet per second. Before the operator can release his grip, GSI GSI Feed Bins We assemble, deliver and set up bins on your farm. • Weather tight die-formed roof • Stronger engineered sidewalls • Ground controlled fill caps • Galvanized roll-formed legs • Engineered leg braced systems • Fast flowing hopper bottom Feed Delivery r tejCt to Systems Flex-Flo feed delivery systems are known world wide for their reliability and long lasting performance. Using flexible augers for feed transfers has proven to be the clear leader for two decades. Designed for easy installation and trouble free operation. Flex-Flo can drastically cut your time, labor and management costs. Guard Against Corn Harvesting Accidents his hand and arm have travelled about three and a half feet and into the machine. To make mat ters worse, once he is entangled in the machine it is often a very difficult and time consuming task to get him out Fortuantely, avoiding accidents like this is easy. Simply turn off the power to your compicker before serv icing it in any way! The gathering mechanisms on com combines do not become plugged as easily as those on compickers. Never theless, com combine operators also run the risk of losing hands, arms, or feet if they try to unplug the rolls without first turning the machine off. Most combine injuries occur when clothing, fingers, hands or legs are caught in the many exposed belts and gears. These accidents usually result in bums and severe cuts although amputa tions also occur. As with the compicker, shut your combine completely off to avoid injury whenever you leave the opera tor’s platform to make adjust ments. If some tasks must be carried out with the machine running, wear clothing that is comfortable but close-fitting. Be especially careful to avoid wearing flappy coveralls, and loose sleeves and cuffs. Because of their size, it is dangerous to use com harvest ing equipment, particularly combines, near ditches or streams. The banks along these channels can give way under the picker or combine and upset it. As a rule, ft prevent acci dents of this nature, keep the center of gravity of your machine as far from the edge of a channel as the channel is deep. For instance, if the bank rises six feet from a ditch, keep at least six feet between the bank’s edge and the center of your machine. Another factor that affects safety during com harvest is the weather. During the rain and cold of late fall com is frequent ly wet or icy. Wet or icy com is more likely to clog the feeding mechanisms of both pickers and combines. It is also more likly to fall over, adding to the problem of muddy and slick field conditions, which make it difficult to stay on the com rows. If you must harvest crops under these conditions, slow your groundspeed and take in less com than you normally would. If you harvest com early in the season, beware of hot and dry conditions. Dry com can catch fire and bum rapidly, endangering not only you and your equipment, but your crops as well. Be alert for overheated bearings or belts and remove accumulations of chaff and stalks from near the manifold. For added safety and the ability to act quickly in an emergency, your harvesting machinery should be equipped with a fire extinguisher at all 4”-6”-7”-8”-10” Diatnei For Permanent or Semi • At your grain bins or • In drying set-ups • Around the dairy ban • In feedlots • At feedmills or elevati 10030033 8”x 31’ w/PTO was $2,036 NOW $1,629 10030034 8” x 41’ w/PTO was $2,353 NOW $1,882 10030035 8” x 51’ w/PTO was $2,786 NOW $2,228 10030038 10" x 51’ w/PTO was $3,744 NOW $2,995 FoS Line of Parte in Stock For Voor Hours: Mon thru FH 7 - 5 Ponltry and Hog Needs a Sat 7:30 - Noon "FARMER BOYAG? 410 East Lincoln Avenue, IMyerstown, PA 17067 24 Hoar 717-866-7965 * 1-800-849-3374 prices w/m Swine A Poultry Systems Specialists 90 B H Com Talk, Lancaster Farming, Saturday, October 14,1995-Pa* ©(DIM TMM M®W§ times. Harvesting com is a demand ing task requiring constant alertness on the part of the machine operator. Due to poor ly operating equipment and/or long woiking hours, farmers frequently lecome fatigued and then canno maintain the level of awareness that is required to safely complete their task. This problem can be avoided, how ever, through careful planning before harvest. For example, “downtime” can be reduced in most cases by inspecting and repairing corn harvesting equipment before harvest day arrives. And although long hours in the field are often necessary, working time can be structured in a way that will allow you to rest periodically. This can be done by setting up shifts and changing off once or twice a day if you are able to share the work with someone else, or by shutting off the machine and taking a break every couple of hours when working alone. On com harvesting equip ment, as with all other farm vehicles, carrying extra riders is a serious hazard. Unnecessary riders not only run the risk of falling under the machinery or getting caught in expo:ed belts Westfield Westfield Transport Grain Augers PENNSYLVANIA MASTER CORN GROWERS ASSOC., INC. or gears, they also distract the driver and can affect his driving performance. When operating com combines make sure no one enters the grain tank or stands near the stalk chopper when the machine is running. Occasionally children may be drawn by curiosity or a sense of adventure to the com field where the harvesting is taking place. Therefore, always be on the lookout for children in the field ahead. The best way to prevent second party accidents, though, is to keep all individu als not involved in the harvest, especially children, far away from the com harvesting operation. A safe, efficient com harvest in autumn depends a great deal upon how well you prepare for accidents. Be aware of the hazards the weather, fatigue, second parties, and embank ments pose. Most of all, remember that the key factor in most com harvesting accidents is the failure of the operator to stop the power before unclog ging or servicing his equip ment. Whenever you need to leave your equipment to service it, do one very important thing before you do anything else: TURN IT OFF! WE SHIP UPS 219