I doubt that for home use, such exigencies are necessary. I know that my welders are dangerous. My rotary phase converter is dangerous. My 80 gallon air compressor is dangerous. My many, many edged tools are dangerous. I do not let children or idiots play in my shop. Period. If I did, they'd likely find the documentation and get paper cuts, or drop a binder on their foot. And anyway -- all warning signage left at its own value -- how many pre-grade school children or idiots do you know who can read? And I include about half of Congress in the latter category.... I do not waste my time creating and deploying warning labels on my stuff unless it's really, REALLY dangerous. Although sometimes I put the following label on the bottom of car batteries: "Open other end." 73 Jim N6OTQ >________________________________ > From: brane2 <brankob@...> >To: Homebrew_PCBs@yahoogroups.com >Sent: Sunday, July 7, 2013 2:03 PM >Subject: Re: [Homebrew_PCBs] Re: For a DIY exposure box ... is collimated light an issue? > > >Dne 07. 07. 2013 18:53, piše brane2: >> >> Fair enough, but in such environments I wouldn't act on your advice >> alone, I would check legal requirements first. One can not deal with >> such things on advice of random legal layman. >> > >I didn't mean to be rude here, just to say that satisfying legal >constraints usually needs knowing _exact_ requirements and just >plopping _somewhere_ _some_ text is not enough... > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
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Re: [Homebrew_PCBs] Re: For a DIY exposure box ... is collimated light an issue?
2013-07-07 by Jim
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