Suggest that you re-read the post you made and the reply I made to it. I am trying to make that easy by quoting them below.
My response was to what came through to me as you saying that a deaf person in such a job does not need to hear. My reminder was that the OP is still in school and I think would need to communicate more during that than later. I did not refer to OSHA or dispute that it applies in both situations.
I took industrial tech, wood tech and shop classes... ALL required hearing protection as soon as you walked in the door, machines running or not.Suggest that you re-read the post you made and the reply I made to it. I am trying to make that easy by quoting them below.
My response was to what came through to me as you saying that a deaf person in such a job does not need to hear. My reminder was that the OP is still in school and I think would need to communicate more during that than later. I did not refer to OSHA or dispute that it applies in both situations.
Omg! He is crazy!View attachment 23709 Well, If OSHA caught this guy that day..... This was a co worker on my crew, Nope... I wasnt doing this, they didnt pay me enough.
Yeah, He was tied off to a 2x4 that was just laid across a window opening.... nice at 3 stories up...View attachment 23706 View attachment 23707 View attachment 23708
Thats all behind me now. I loved working with machinery, designing and modifying them was awesome.Son~
Good for you to pick the field of manufacturing. Being an CNC operator or doing CAD/CAM programs to cite a few examples is a good & well paying job/career.
I used to run paper converting machinery & the "noise" was at 100 decibels....Everybody was required to wear Osha safety approved ear plugs.
Again, continue to advance in this profession & get as many Certs-