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Hot Rods Do you wear safety shoes/boots when working in your shop?

Discussion in 'The Hokey Ass Message Board' started by phartman, Jun 15, 2021.

  1. patterg2003
    Joined: Sep 21, 2014
    Posts: 865

    patterg2003

    Everywhere I worked it was safety glasses and a face shield for wire wheels & zipcuts. I saw a welders face get a cut from a zipcut on a side grinder when he decide to skip the the face shield. It was close to being very serious. My brother in law was a pipefitter. One of the fitters on his job skipped the face shield and the wire wheel started to let go. They had to pull a line of wires out of the fellows face. Its good to have the added protection of the face shield. I have a nice one that I use then put it back in its box so it does not get scratched up & useless from sitting around.
     
  2. 4 pedals
    Joined: Oct 8, 2009
    Posts: 962

    4 pedals
    Member
    from Nor Cal

    I don't wear sneakers unless I'm going for a run...and I don't run. I live in boots.

    Devin
     
    The37Kid and Deuces like this.
  3. gene-koning
    Joined: Oct 28, 2016
    Posts: 4,087

    gene-koning
    Member

    The second job I ever had required steel toed work boots, I've worn them ever since.
    The steel toed work boots have saved my toes many times over the years, including the time my foot got run over by a fork truck. I got one broken toe out of that one, but the steel toe saved the other 4 toes and pretty much the entire foot. It required a new pair of boots, but I thought that was a worth while trade off.

    I've been retired 2 years now, I just bought a new pair of steel toed work boots to wear in the shop.
    The steel toe boots go along with the welding helmet, the welding gloves, the welding sleeves, and safety glasses are all the stuff that goes with working in my shop.
     
  4. mickeyc
    Joined: Jul 8, 2008
    Posts: 1,368

    mickeyc
    Member

    I am a stickler for PPE (personal protective equipment) I had a very long
    career in heavy construction. I saw safety go from being virtually non
    existent to being utterly stringent as it is today. I saw many many serious
    injuries which include horrible maiming to deaths on the job. I use the same
    basic safety criteria while working in my shop or at home. The first lesson that is stressed to workers when encountering safety training is that you are ultimately responsible to ensure your own safe well being. I wear military
    type composite hightop boots almost daily. They are surprisingly light and
    give my old beat up ankles much needed support. That being said I enjoy
    watching a variety of the network shows featuring car builders. I cringe
    when I see these professional builders working with little or no PPE as
    well as the really hazardous way they use tools. Also the way they place their
    hands and bodies in positions that could get them injured at any given moment. Any one of these practices would get a worker fired instantly in
    todays industrial workplaces. I have l seen a lot of good guys fired that thought they could circumvent a safety standard.
     
  5. gimpyshotrods
    Joined: May 20, 2009
    Posts: 23,329

    gimpyshotrods
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    Day job requires full PPE. Since I go to the shop directly from there, it is all PPE, all the time.
     
    clem likes this.
  6. jetnow1
    Joined: Jan 30, 2008
    Posts: 2,158

    jetnow1
    ALLIANCE MEMBER
    from CT
    1. A-D Truckers

    I am pretty good with using safety equipment while welding or grinding, otherwise not so much.
     
  7. Roothawg
    Joined: Mar 14, 2001
    Posts: 24,584

    Roothawg
    Member

    I had a hard finding steel toe flip flops, but I finally found a set to match my steel cupped Speedo.
     
  8. Budget36
    Joined: Nov 29, 2014
    Posts: 13,262

    Budget36
    Member

    I really have no choice. My shoe “wardrobe” consists of two pairs of ANSI spec’Ed composite toe boots, a pair of slippers and somewhere a pair of dress shoes.
    Ya, I don’t get out much.
     
    hotrodjack33 likes this.
  9. clem
    Joined: Dec 20, 2006
    Posts: 4,217

    clem
    Member

    Safety first, always -
    it takes no more time to put on boots than sand shoes,
    always use the appropriate protective gear for what is required.
    A trip to the emergency department and any recovery takes longer than putting on a little extra protective gear !
     
    Guy Patterson likes this.
  10. Stooge
    Joined: Sep 9, 2015
    Posts: 504

    Stooge
    Member

    I used to wear them most of the time, and I keep a pair in the car so i always have them, but i have a few slipped discs and sciatica now, so unless im moving something heavy or doing something that could be hazardous to my toes, i go for nice comfortable and supportive sneakers. Maybe not the smartest choice, but even with months of physical therapy and some cortisone shots, good sneakers made the biggest difference in not being in constant pain.
     
  11. ERguitar
    Joined: Aug 26, 2018
    Posts: 198

    ERguitar
    Member

    I always wear steel toe boots. It helps that work has a decent reimbursement program and will pay a decent portion even though my job doesn't really require it (desk jockey). Their philosophy is that if you are hurt at home it's not good for the business either. I haven't always been safety concious but having the kids work with me made me ramp up my (and their) game.
     
  12. Seems I need to ramp up my game as I have been called out even a few times here from my kids footwear, etc. while working in the shop...:oops:

    IMG_0549.JPG
     
  13. woodiewagon46
    Joined: Mar 14, 2013
    Posts: 2,277

    woodiewagon46
    Member
    from New York

    No I don't but I should have. I was disassembling my engine hoist and undid the bolt for the top of the piston. I undid the bolt for the top bar and was just lifting it off and the piston swung down and the end of the ram hit my big toe squarely and broke it it two places. What a freak accident. If the piston was in an inch it would have missed my toe and if it was out six inches it would have also missed.
     
  14. GirchyGirchy
    Joined: Mar 17, 2011
    Posts: 276

    GirchyGirchy
    Member
    from Central IN

    IMO, the bigger issue there is a lack of a mask while sanding. Sandpaper doesn't hurt when you drop it on your toe.
     
    Budget36 and guthriesmith like this.
  15. 5window
    Joined: Jan 29, 2005
    Posts: 9,548

    5window
    Member

    If you worked in a vet hospital, you'd literally drop shit on your feet and know why we don't allow staff to wear open toed shoes, :)
     
  16. Lol...yea, there’s that too. But, considering he was sanding fiberglass, his toes would have itched less with at least some closed-toe shoes. In my defense, he wasn’t sanding enough to be breathing much in. He probably spent less than an hour helping when I caught a quick picture. :D
     
  17. Tim
    Joined: Mar 2, 2001
    Posts: 17,209

    Tim
    Member
    from KCMO

    I try to wear appropriate shoes but tend to stay away from steel toes. Paranoid that when I drop that big heavy thing on my foot that steel toe is going to turn into either a blade or something I can’t get my foot out of.
     
  18. ramblin dan
    Joined: Apr 16, 2018
    Posts: 3,621

    ramblin dan

    Where I work they are required so they give us a safety shoe allowance where we can get a new pair every year so I always keep the old pair and use them in the garage and for yard work. They have been making them with a plastic or fiberglass toe in the shoes for some time now which makes them a lot lighter than the old steel toes. Back when I was younger I worked in a steel mill where there were guys welding and the steel toe in the work boots would eventually tear through the front of the boot. As a joke other guys would wait while a guy was welding and tack weld a piece of steel to exposed steel toe.
     
  19. I pretty much live in shorts and flipflops, makes welding more exciting.
     
  20. patmanta
    Joined: May 10, 2011
    Posts: 3,874

    patmanta
    ALLIANCE MEMBER
    from Woburn, MA
    1. MASSACHUSETTS HAMB

    I always wear safety shoes or boots in the shop. I've hurt myself enough times where proper footwear would have saved me that I get a tingly spidey sense feeling if I walk into my shop in the wrong shoes now.

    @Stooge I can recommend some shoes that might be easier on you. My boots are Carhartt (Carhartt Force® 4 Inch Black Waterproof Slip On) composite toe and I can be in them all day. My low top shop shoes are Sketchers (Skechers for Work Men's Hartan Steel Toe Slip-On Shoe) which are lightweight with good memory foam insoles; these or another Sketchers brand work shoe may be good for you.
     
    Stooge and Guy Patterson like this.
  21. Elcohaulic
    Joined: Dec 27, 2017
    Posts: 2,213

    Elcohaulic

    Always.. I'm an electrician and need to have well insolated souls along with shields, I use the plastic ones though lol...
     
    5window likes this.
  22. My daily attire, work and welding shoes......rain or shine. I have old work boots from work but, yuk.
    [​IMG]
     
    jnaki likes this.
  23. jnaki
    Joined: Jan 1, 2015
    Posts: 9,391

    jnaki





    Hey 1OT,

    Yikes, I have had my share of the local So Cal icon in sandals, too. When they started, it was an old shed in an area with a ton of junkyards and repair businesses. The shed is still there, but it is a throwback showroom for everyone. The oldest pair is an old leather one that are older than yours, but yours looks older just because of wear and tear.

    My original leather Rainbow Sandals were given to me by a friend who worked there a long time ago. They had just had too many people that wanted arches in the flat soled versions. So, one of the workers inserted a different color arch insert and a new generation was born.

    My flat feet have been with me through thick and thin. Good for level support, but bad for future draft notices as a teenager, or so I was told. It looked like a trail of ducks was following me out of a pool or after surf shower. My foot prints set the tone for being flat footed. My mom used to laugh because she said she had a duck footed son. They did nothing for speed of swimming, either.

    Jnaki

    But, wearing those brand new, at the time, arch Rainbow Sandals made the flat feet arches have some movement. When I would walk out of the pool, I began to feel like a normal guy leaving normal wet feet prints and not have a duck following me around. Now, my little toddler son could say he was following his dad and not a big duck. (although my old 1960s friends used to call me Baby Huey, but that is another story)

    But, those old Rainbows are just a classic scene in all of So Cal. The old store is packed daily and on weekends, it is the busiest place in the area. The corporate offices are inland about 5 miles and in a multi-story building. The sandals set the tone for all of So Cal and in the USA for beach attire and lifestyle.

    Your sandals are just a classic scene in So Cal...old, well worn and wiser... kind of like all of us oldtimers... Ha!
     
    1oldtimer likes this.
  24. moparboy440
    Joined: Sep 30, 2011
    Posts: 1,096

    moparboy440
    Member
    from Finland

  25. I started getting when I was a kid in the early 80s, even got my grandpa into them. Back then they were flat hunks of foam. When I walk in the sand next to the g/f it looks like a t-rex walking with a human......I always say "That just means I won't tip over easy" :).
    [​IMG]
     
    Deuces and jnaki like this.
  26. nochop
    Joined: Nov 13, 2005
    Posts: 3,837

    nochop
    Member
    from norcal

    Just closed toe shoes, wore boots for 40+ years on the job, still have a pair though
     
  27. I wear my safety boots all the time when I go out the door of the house , just shaved off my beard though , finally figured it was to close for comfort around grinders ,belt Sanders, drills and so on in the shop , lots of close calls where a drill would catch a few hairs and pull them out !!!
    I can tell you gold is a great conductor of heat when some slag dripped on to my wedding ring , was just a quick little job , no need to take it off ,I mean what could happen?? Its alway's the quick little task that gets you !!!
     
  28. fuzzface
    Joined: Dec 7, 2006
    Posts: 1,676

    fuzzface
    Member

    That is all I ever wear are steal toes, even my cowboy boots I wear for going out are even steel toes.
     
  29. Never used to until a completely stupid potential accident a couple summers ago, now if I’m doing any kind of garden work or anything heavy in the garage I put on my work boot.

    Using the lawn trimmer last year in my flip flops it kicked a stone into my big toe cracking the nail and having me bleed out like a stuck pig!!
    I freaked out let go of the trimmer it hit my calf on the way to the ground, causing me to fall. Somehow sucked my flip flop into the string and smacked me on the calf and foot .
    I got pissed and grabbed the dang thing and tossed it in the middle of the street while my calf and foot where all bloody.

    the neighbour said it took all of 5 seconds and looked like I got jumped by 5 gangbangers the way I was jumping and flaying around.

    All good, no permanent injuries other then my pride.
    So since then I where proper foot protection
     
  30. 5window
    Joined: Jan 29, 2005
    Posts: 9,548

    5window
    Member

    Yeah, I and use these for jack stands. Works fine-until it doesn't. :( Good luck.
    [​IMG]
     
    The37Kid, Deuces, patmanta and 2 others like this.

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