Project; Laser & Lab Safety

 

 

 

 

Project Description:
Part1
Develop Job Safety Analysis/ Job Hazard Analysis. Using supplied OSHA Government Booklet develop a JSA, JHA on a specific job at your workplace, at home or at TRCC. Make sure you discuss this with your job supervisor and coworkers if you are doing it at work. A. Filled in JSA/JHA. An example form is provided but you can use any standard form. Due date October 30, 2020
Part 2
You have been assigned to complete the safety outfit for a new Machine Shop Lab in the new building. The lab will contain 4 milling machines, 4 lathes, a drill press, 2 band saws, a plasma cutter 4 welding machines several grinding machines and a laser engraver.
Project Objectives: • To develop a purchasing list of safety materials for the machine tools listed above •
To develop a list of Machine Shop Safety Rules & Procedures.
Procedure: Using the information presented in the safety videos, your prior safety experiences, or lessons learned or observed in your previous laboratory or machine shop courses, develop a purchasing list. You may assume a total safety equipment budget of $5000. You will not be able to purchase everything you need, so purchase what you can.
1. Use an online industrial catalog ( www.grainger.com or http://www.mscdirect.com/ or www.mcmastercarr.com ) to develop your equipment list
2. Record and organize your equipment in an Excel spreadsheet. Make sure to capture the correct quantity, unit cost and total cost for each item. Provide a total equipage cost.
3. Develop a list of Machine Shop Safety Rules and Procedures. You should integrate the knowledge gained in the safety videos with other machine shop safety lists. Include the ‘example lists’ you use with our submission. Submission Requirements: A. Excel spreadsheet containing safety equipage items, correct quantity, unit cost and total cost. Remember the total safety equipment budget must not exceed $5000. B. Machine Shop Safety Rules and Procedures list. Include the example lists you used to derive your list.

 

 

 

 

 

Sample Solution

he muse of Pan presented reoccurring themes to the Edwardian Reader. In her master’s Paper. ‘Pan and the Edwardians,’ Eleanor Toland, explores the Edwardian fascination with Pan as a figure across Edwardian Literature, the author stated that ‘Pan represented a simultaneous craving in the Edwardian Era to flee the past and embrace the future, an idealism of the primitive coupled with hope for the future.’ The Wind in the Willows, first published in 1908, is still regarded as a children’s classic, featuring anthropomorphic animals, popularised in writing for children, by authors such as Beatrix Potter. Closer reading and discussion suggest the book is not a book for children. References within the text to children are scant. The concerns of the animals are not the concerns of children. The characters represent a male Edwardian Class system. Each animal serves as device: Grahame depicts toad as a likable, possibly childish rogue, though a toad may be considered by some to be repugnant. The call of the home and domesticity is illustrated through rat. Mole’s character centres around the need for adventure. Amicable relationships between the animals, or country gentlemen of ages and stages with Edwardian middle Class are further reflected through characters. Badger is seen as wise and reverent, a friend of Toad’s father and so of the establishment. The threat of ‘the other’ is documented in the form of the weasels, opportunist antagonists. Themes of greed, silliness and excesses represented by Mr. Toad are intended as salutary lessons to the reader. The symbolic attributes of the characters Suggest the author fears embracing of new trends will end badly, and we should we return to values inspired by nature. Ratty and Mole’s journey sees them experience adventure, only to return to the simplicity of hearth and home. Grahame dedicates a whole chapter to Pan, within The Wind in The Willows, ‘The Piper at the Gates of Dawn’ to Pan. Here, the animals encounter Pan the God. The chapter could be seen as an incongruous departure from the tone of the novel, (Several publications omit the chapter from the book.) The language throughout this chapter differs from the affectionate camaraderie of the rest of the book, it is rich and brims with exaltation. Grahame closes the piece with ‘All this he saw, for one moment breathless and intense, vivid on the morning sky; and still, as he looked, he lived; and still, as he lived, he wondered’. On first reading, Piper at the Gates of Dawn did not seem part of an arc or co

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