Chain saws
- by Electro
- 2014-03-25 12:03:22
- Interferences
- 2754 views
- 6 comments
Got my pacemaker October 2013 and so far I have not had any problems with my electric power tools. I use a chainsaw and I also do some welding with my wire welder. Have not used either one of them and I wanted to ask if anyone has used a welder with wire feed or a chainsaw since having the pace maker implanted. I have been warned about using either of those tools. I can do without the wire feed welder and use my gas welder instead but I heat my house with wood and I usually harvest wood myself so using a chainsaw is a hard one to give up. Anyone using a chainsaw or wire feed welders? Let me know if you have any experience with those. Thanks, Electro
6 Comments
it's fine
by Tracey_E - 2014-03-25 11:03:26
Chain saws are ok to use. I don't know much about welders, only that we can't Arc weld, is that the same as wire feeder? If you do a search for "welding", this comes up all the time and there are lots of previous posts discussing it.
chain saw
by manaman - 2014-03-26 01:03:28
Just cut of a large oak tree with no issues at all (just a lot slower than I used to be)
Cecil
Not a chain saw, but. . .
by SteveE - 2014-03-26 09:03:55
I haven't used a chain saw, but I had a goofy situation when running a random-orbital buffer that could also happen with a chain saw.
I was buffing some wall paneling after polishing it. After I did about 20 linear feet of buffing, I noticed my heart racing. I felt really lousy and had to lay down on the floor to get my head clear again. I went back to buffing, and the same thing happened. Then I realized that I was holding the buffer in my left hand. I switched to my right and the heart race issue went away.
I concluded, with much laughter at myself, that the vibration of the buffer was traveling up my left arm and was shaking my left chest area at a fast rate. This was driving my pacer's rate response function crazy. The pacer thought I was running a marathon!
So, be aware of tools that rattle your chest if you have rate response turned on. A lot of shaking can cause your heart to race when otherwise nothing is wrong.
was told by a doctor this morning....
by ChrisW12208 - 2014-06-28 06:06:47
that chainsaws have ungrounded alternators that can have stray currents. While holding a chainsaw you have both hands on it therefore stray currents will go right through your chest. Not good.
welding and playing with chainsaw is ok
by sacsgokartman - 2014-10-09 07:10:39
hello check it out if we all listened to our dr`s we would not have these things in our chest .so why now are you so worried about what he or she said ,live life i weld all the time and yes i use a chain saw aswell and nothing went wrong my heart only pumps 15% i have a icd plus they say i have sudden death syndrome my dr told me my job was to much stress i said for who ?i love my job . anyway live life as you once did befor the implants trust me you`ll be much happier in your life .
You know you're wired when...
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Yesterday I moved to a new place in my mind and realized how bad I felt 'before' and the difference my pacemaker has made.
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by Theknotguy - 2014-03-25 02:03:52
Most of those warnings are CYA by the manufacturer. I sit next to an 88 year old guy in church. He runs his chain saw all the time. No problem. Complains he can't pick up 1/2 of a tree like he used to.
Wire welders shouldn't be a problem either. Generator is way over on the cart and you're welding over here. Just keep the arc more than 6 inches from the PM and make sure everything is well grounded 1st. Besides, if you get the arc closer than 6 inches to the PM you're not that good of a welder anyway.
I was leaning over two different car engines. Closest I got my PM to the alternator while it was running was two feet. No problems. Didn't collapse and have the fan blade make stripes on my hide.
Theknotguy