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Equipment accident death

Printed From: Unofficial Allis
Category: Allis Chalmers
Forum Name: Farm Equipment
Forum Description: everything about Allis-Chalmers farm equipment
URL: https://www.allischalmers.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=18169
Printed Date: 07 Feb 2025 at 12:47am
Software Version: Web Wiz Forums 11.10 - http://www.webwizforums.com


Topic: Equipment accident death
Posted By: Brad MI
Subject: Equipment accident death
Date Posted: 13 Sep 2010 at 4:46am
My neighbor was killed in a round baler accident yesterday afternoon. I don't have all the details, but it sounds like he was cleaning it out and the rear door came down. I suspect he decided he didn't have the time to engage the safety pin/latch for just the few seconds of being in there. He was a great guy and will be missed. BE SAFE!



Replies:
Posted By: Calvin Schmidt
Date Posted: 13 Sep 2010 at 5:54am
Sorry to hear that Brad. I read about a similiar accident several weeks ago where the hydraulic hose burst and the operator became traped inside a running baler. Like you said-BE SAFE

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Nothing is impossible if it is properly financed


Posted By: CTuckerNWIL
Date Posted: 13 Sep 2010 at 7:24am
Sorry to hear this. Take the time to be safe guys. A guy I used to work for would never latch the baler open when working inside. If he did he would forget to unlatch it and when he got in the tractor to go he got mad cause the baler was latched open. I just stood back and let him do his thing telling him I won't help unless it was latched.

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http://www.ae-ta.com" rel="nofollow - http://www.ae-ta.com
Lena 1935 WC12xxx, Willie 1951 CA6xx Dad bought new, 1954WD45 PS, 1960 D17 NF


Posted By: clovis
Date Posted: 13 Sep 2010 at 10:31am
So sorry to hear about the accident. 


Posted By: JohnCO
Date Posted: 13 Sep 2010 at 11:11am
Sorry to hear of your loss.

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"If at first you don't succeed, get a bigger hammer"
Allis Express participant


Posted By: Bill Long
Date Posted: 13 Sep 2010 at 11:18am
You know you can never be too careful around Farm Equipment.  I remember a person who got his pants caught in an uncovered PTO shaft.  He said he heard the engine open up and there was a good possibility of being killed or seriously maimed.  He hung onto the seat and lost his pants but saved his life.
I know there are many more safety features out there but you cannot be too careful.
Please accept my sincere sympathy for your loss.
Good Luck!
Bill Long


Posted By: Dave(inMA)
Date Posted: 13 Sep 2010 at 12:26pm
I hate reading about these  tragedies. But too often we push the limits of what's really safe - for reasons I just don't get. Buddy of mine ran a JD 4020 with a Kuhn rotary mower. He'd crawl under that mower to change a bent blade leaving the 4020 running. Always gave me the creeps - I know that the pto was disengaged, so no power to the mower, but suppose something weird happened and the pto reengaged with him under there.......don't even want to think about that. Wouldn't have taken any extra time to shut down the tractor and restart when done with the mower. He always said he was fine doing it his way, but what if?

Why not shut the machinery all the way off and be safer?


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WC, CA, D14, WD45


Posted By: Brad MI
Date Posted: 13 Sep 2010 at 3:24pm
I got more details from the first responders this morning. When they came on the seen the tractor was idling with the baler attached. The rear door was closed with the victim's head and one arm trapped inside. He had an air hose inside the baler, apparently cleaning the chaff out of the baler. It was several minutes before anyone with enough knowledge of the baler arrived and was able to open the door, although I doubt it would have made any difference after a few seconds; that door closed with hydraulic pressure would have been a tremendous amount of force to endure. If he would have taken the time to engage the safety latches it would be a non-story today- a lesson for all. 


Posted By: Greg (Hillsboro, OH)
Date Posted: 13 Sep 2010 at 3:57pm
My nephew watched a woman get her hair tangled into a grain auger and it pulled her through.  They couldn't get to her in time.  Another local person got the strings on their 'hoodie' caught in the PTO and killed.  Many people in our area now have stickers that say "loose strings kill" with his picture next to it.
We all do stupid stuff because we're in a hurry.  A few seconds of safety can make a lifetime of difference to your family.


Posted By: Kip-Utah
Date Posted: 13 Sep 2010 at 4:00pm
Sorry to hear of this tragedy. I had a good friend that converted a field chopper to stationary use for chopping hay at his small feedlot. No header assembly or safety guards of any kind. He somehow went through this machine head first. His remains were spread with a partial load of feed on a nearby hilltop. I was one of the first on the scene & it still haunts me more than twenty years later. Be careful!! Kip

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HANSEN'S OLD ORANGE IRON. Showing, Pulling, & Going!!


Posted By: AllisChalmers37
Date Posted: 13 Sep 2010 at 4:02pm

That's tough. I hope that people take this as an example of what can happen by not taking two minutes to let the saftey bars down.



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1937 WC, 1950 CA, 1959 D14, 1967 190XT, 2006 Ram 3500


Posted By: wayne3
Date Posted: 13 Sep 2010 at 9:16pm
  I feel for his family. Farm accidents are unforgiving. Just last week we had two farm accidents locally. One 47 year old man lost his life. He'd been brushhogging,apparrently drove up on a round bale,flipped over. The other man was lucky, just a broken leg. Hope everyone stays safe.


Posted By: Rick of HopeIN
Date Posted: 13 Sep 2010 at 9:32pm
Saw a loader boom fall on a in the prototype shop once, about a 4 yard machine just been built, one hose had a bad crimp and it went down faster than I would have thought possible. 
There are no base safety valves like on a manlift.  If anyone has been close they would not have had time to get away.      


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1951 B, 1937 WC, 1957 D14, -- Thanks and God Bless


Posted By: DREAM
Date Posted: 13 Sep 2010 at 9:42pm
Very sorry to hear about your neighbor. We all catch ourselves doing things we know better than doing when we get in a hurry. Most of the time we're lucky. He was not. It could be any one of us next time. We all just need to slow down.
I had a friend who was bush-hogging. Going under some low-hanging limbs. He was apparently pushing a limb up out of the way, but it was larger than he thought, and started pushing him off the tractor. He apparently couldn't reach the clutch. Tractor was idled down when they found it. It had stalled against a tree. He was lying with his head and arms out from under the front of the bush-hog. Everything from the ribcage down was destroyed. It took over an hour for EMS to untangle him from the flails and lift the bush-hog up enough to get him out. He was air-vacced to Atlanta, but died shortly after reaching the hospital. He wasn't even 25 years old. I guess if he hadn't hit the throttle as he went off, it probably wouldn't have stalled out when it hit the tree, and would have finished him off right there. Might have been better actually. I'm sure he suffered a lot.
Remember, machines have no brain. Use your own. Advice for all of us.


Posted By: Stan IL&TN
Date Posted: 13 Sep 2010 at 9:48pm
Our next door neighbor was inside his grain bin with the floor sweep auger running.  I suppose he was helping the auger get the last few bushels out of the bin.  He got too close to the auger and it caught his pant leg and pulled his foot into the center hole.  He bear hugged the auger and was able to stop it until the belt broke on the motor outside the bin.  It broke his ankle and cut him up pretty bad but he survived.  He was a strong stout german and his strength was what helped him that day. 

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1957 WD45 dad's first AC

1968 one-seventy

1956 F40 Ferguson


Posted By: ChuckLuedtkeSEWI
Date Posted: 13 Sep 2010 at 9:56pm
A friend of my dad's got caught once by a pto shaft.   Luckily the tractor was idled down enough and when it tossed him around he was enough resistance to kill the tractor.  Spent a couple months in the hospital but he survived.   Before he passed on, he told many of us the story and to be careful.  I remember that story like it was yesterday.   It was a loose shirt tale that pulled him in.  


Posted By: Brian Jasper co. Ia
Date Posted: 13 Sep 2010 at 11:05pm

Same goes for working on something in the shop. If I have to jack something up, a stand goes under there too.



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"Any man who thinks he can be happy and prosperous by letting the government take care of him better take a closer look at the American Indian." Henry Ford


Posted By: Rawleigh
Date Posted: 14 Sep 2010 at 9:35am
I ran my bushhog over a garden hose the other day and had to untangle it.  I cannot imagine how gruesome untangling a mans guts from that would be!!  I feel sorry for the EMT's too!  It probably would have been a blessing if it had finished him quicker!!

We had a farmer around here back in the '70's who got pulled down onto an auger and it took his nuts off!!  other than that he was OK (if you can call it that)!!


Posted By: CJohnS MI
Date Posted: 14 Sep 2010 at 9:39am
Originally posted by Rawleigh Rawleigh wrote:


We had a farmer around here back in the '70's who got pulled down onto an auger and it took his nuts off!!  other than that he was OK (if you can call it that)!!


That's the method of birth control all my ex-wives wanted to use.



Posted By: bill2260
Date Posted: 14 Sep 2010 at 10:15am
Farmer 5 miles from my farm was killed sunday when a small yanmar he was operating upset on him. His wife found him sunday evening. Hillside farm in wv. Bill


Posted By: split51
Date Posted: 14 Sep 2010 at 10:49am
 A few years ago, a local man was loading a dozer with no ROPS on a tall trailer, he was driving it up the trailer blade first.  It rolled over backwards, pinning him under it. He died instantly.

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1929 20-35 sn17662
B1 w/snow blade
B10 w/sickle mower
B110 w/mower deck
B110 w/tiller
B112 w/grader blade
B210 w/plo


Posted By: DMiller
Date Posted: 14 Sep 2010 at 10:55am
Why is it we all find ways to ignore machinery that is running?  My BIL stepped off the 180 with the bush hog running, he stepped off the back onto the BH, I chewed his butt out for two days!!

I have three damaged fingers from being stupid with a wood jointer(at 15 years old) and in my 5o's now, still hurt today as if I did it yesterday, just damned lucky I did not lose them but same stupidity got me there.

Sorry for the loss butt we need to use the safeties or make the equipment as safe as can or risk the major loss.


Posted By: Charlie175
Date Posted: 14 Sep 2010 at 11:38am
Local farmers dad was helping out with a bush hog and his grandson was riding the fender when they hit a hole and tossed the kid off and he ran over him with the bush hog. Very sad day.

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Charlie

'48 B, '51 CA, '56 WD45 '61 D17, '63 D12, '65 D10 , '68 One-Ninety XTD


Posted By: D17JIM
Date Posted: 14 Sep 2010 at 11:55am
Crawled out from under a grain head years ago when helping a mechanic work on a header control.  We were working on the part on the pickup truck tailgate and heard a crash.  Blown hydraulic hose not 5 minutes after crawilng out from under it.  COMMUNICATE, I thought he had put the safety latch down and he thought i had.
Also all my clothes except for my cap and boots were removed by a tractor pto.  I was standing up on the opisite side of the pto from which I started with hands still holding on to the tractor seat. (44 MH) Beat up and scared as H&%^ but OK.  Still can't figure for sure how I got over the pto still standing.  Pto had a roller guard but shirt tail got into the u-joint.  BE CAREFUL !!! 


Posted By: clovis
Date Posted: 14 Sep 2010 at 7:41pm
This is such a sad thread to me. It has been on my mind all day.




Posted By: DREAM
Date Posted: 14 Sep 2010 at 7:44pm
Me too. I keep thinking about Jack. Funny how you forget that stuff, or push it out of your mind. Thinking about it makes you sad, but it does serve to remind us of how frail we all are compared to some of the things we build. We forget that we built them to do jobs we are too weak to do, and therefore they are much stronger and more powerful than we could ever be. We must try to always respect them.


Posted By: clovis
Date Posted: 14 Sep 2010 at 7:50pm
I couldn't have said it better, Dream.

I think we get accustomed to those tools that we have at hand, and become forgetful of how dangerous they actually can be.

I'm sad for the men who were just working as they always have, and even sadder for their families. 



Posted By: CJohnS MI
Date Posted: 14 Sep 2010 at 8:08pm
Originally posted by clovis clovis wrote:

I'm sad for the men who were just working as they always have, and even sadder for their families.


Amen brother, AMEN.



Posted By: Rayhowling
Date Posted: 14 Sep 2010 at 8:24pm
I was on the Ontario Farm Safety Association as a director for 10 years and chairman for 3 years. I attended Safety conferences throughout  Canada and  in Iowa, Maryland, Pennsylvania. I've heard testimonials from many at these conferences and meetings and it is very disturbing to hear of so many accidents that could have been prevented. There are an average of 100 farmers killed in Canada yearly. In the last 15 months there have been more killed in farm accidents in Canada than Canadian solders killed in Afghanistan in the last 8 years that Canada was involved in Afghanistan.


Posted By: AllisFreak MN
Date Posted: 14 Sep 2010 at 8:31pm
Dream, you really put it into perspective. A local man lost his arm in a corn picker a few years ago and another man lost his life in a haybine accident recently. Both were avoidable accidents if safety rules were followed. Sometimes I catch myself doing stupid things because I'm in a hurry too. Please be careful!

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'49 A-C WD, '51 A-C WD, '63 A-C D17 Series III, 1968 A-C One-Seventy, '82 A-C 6060, '75 A-C 7040, A-C #3 sickle mower, 2 A-C 701 wagons, '78 Gleaner M2


Posted By: DREAM
Date Posted: 14 Sep 2010 at 8:43pm
That's what always happens. You think if you can just knock this out, you can get on to something else on the never shrinking list in front of you, and you might not be as far behind. I do it, I don't think I can help it. We just can't get it hrough our heads that we will never live long enough to get caught up, especially if we keep doing what we're doing.


Posted By: Rawleigh
Date Posted: 15 Sep 2010 at 12:22pm
"Familiarity breeds contempt" as the old saying goes.  It is easy to get careless around equipment.  There but for the grace of God go I!!


Posted By: Breeze
Date Posted: 15 Sep 2010 at 4:38pm
Sorry to hear of your neighbor. A friend died using a piece of re-bar to line up the lift pin holes on some equipment and with him leaning over the re-bar while reaching to bump the lift it dropped ever so slightly, but enough to jack the re-bar up into the side of his head.
I was an AFOSH( Air Force Occupational Safety Hazard) facility inspector for a couple years and realized back then that simple situations do create big safety issues. Be safe everyone.


Posted By: firebrick43
Date Posted: 19 Sep 2010 at 2:23pm
It is amazing how some people never learn.  I was talking to an idiot at work about witnessing some other idiots driving tractors holding onto their small children on their laps.  He stated he always did, once even being thrown from the tractor(grabbed onto some bailing string tied to the fender to keep from being run over by the bushhog until his dad got the tractor stopped).  Still didn't think that it was that dangerous and he lets family ride on his tractors.  I had to walk away from him.  



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