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Here's a reminder to the field users of the importance of regular chainsaw chap maintenance. (snip)
Equipment Specialist Missoula Technology & Development Center ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Earlier this summer, an incident occurred where an agency sawyer accidentally contacted his protective chainsaw chaps with a running saw chain. The chaps received damage which seemed worse than would have been expected due to the reported chain speed. The incident came to the attention of the Missoula Technology and Development Center and the chaps were obtained for examination. Inspection of the chaps revealed some key findings: * The chaps were correctly constructed to current specifications, USFS 6170-4F. * The chaps cut through at a lower chain speed (speed reported by operator) than was expected. * There were several older, unrepaired cuts in the Cordura outer shell layer which allowed increased oil and gas contamination to the Kevlar inner layers. * The increased contamination was the probable cause of the decreased protection level. Chainsaw chaps are a critical piece of safety equipment. Care instructions should be followed to maintain chaps for optimal effectiveness. The cleaning and repair instructions are packaged with all newly purchased chaps. Additionally, a MTDC Tech Tip, Inspecting, Cleaning, Repairing, and Retiring USDA Forest Service Chain Saw Chaps is displayed below. The Tech Tip (including the chaps photos) is also available at: http://www.fs.fed.us/t-d/pubs/pdfpub...2324dpi300.pdf (PASSWORD: t-d) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Inspecting, Cleaning, Repairing, and Retiring USDA Forest Service Chain Saw Chaps Lori Messenger, Project Assistant (internal fs web link) Tony Petrilli, Project Leader (internal fs web link) Since 1965, the U.S. Department of Agriculture Forest Service has provided cut-resistant, protective chaps for chain saw operators. Chain saw chaps have prevented thousands of serious injuries. The Missoula Technology and Development Center (MTDC) has tracked chain contact injuries and accidents and has improved the chaps over the past 35 years. The protective pad in the original style of Forest Service chain saw chaps consisted of four layers of ballistic nylon. This ballistic nylon resisted a chain speed of 1,800 feet per minute without cutting through. In 1981, Forest Service chain saw chaps were redesigned to be stronger and more comfortable. The ballistic nylon was replaced with a Kevlar pad. The level of protection was increased to a chain speed of 2,500 feet per minute without cutting through and the weight of the chaps was reduced by 40 percent. In 2000, chain saw chaps were redesigned to provide more protection and to increase the coverage area. The new chaps are designed to provide protection to a chain speed of 3,200 feet per minute without cutting through. Because chain saws are operated in the right hand, the majority of chain contact injuries are on the left leg. The coverage area on the left side of the left leg was increased by about 2½ inches and on the left side of the right leg by about 1½ inches. Because the chaps provide more protection, and cover more area, the weight of each pair of chaps increased by 6 to 8 ounces (depending on the length of chaps required by the user: 32, 36, or 40 inches). Full details on the chaps are included in MTDC specification 6170-4. How Forest Service Chain Saw Chaps Protect the User The back-coated nylon shell covering the protective Kevlar pad is resistant to water, oil, and abrasion. The pad consists of a shell of coated nylon duck with five layers of Kevlar inside: woven Kevlar, felted Kevlar, woven Kevlar, woven Kevlar, and felted Kevlar (figure 1, photo at TechTip link). Figure 1—A chainsaw chap has five layers of Kevlar. The chain saw chaps protect the user by slowing and stopping the chain. Fibers of the protective pad are pulled into the saw’s drive sprocket, causing the saw to jam (figure 2, photo at TechTip link). Figure 2—Kevlar fibers jam the chain saw's drive sprocket, stopping the chain saw and preventing injuries. Inspection and Retirement Chain saw chaps need to be inspected frequently and retired when appropriate. Retire chain saw chaps when:
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