it seems almost any tool you get anymore has a laser guide on it, I’m not sure why you would need them on a drill. Are they going to start putting them on nail sets and chisels? Anyway, there is a safety notice about not shining them in eyes, can they do damage?
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I purchased the metabo paint stripper, And am in the process of using it to strip wood shingles on a 1950's cape. The tool works great. Helps to hook up to a shop vac to minimize dust. Still makes a mess though. Also tool has plastic doors over the radial cutters. they will inevitably break off. Need to be careful becuase this exposes the blades. I think the meatbo may be a little slower than the paint shaver, but for the price difference it works great for me. ALso the meatbo has a square base which gets into corners. Buy extra blades before you need them. Takes a while to receive. I bought mine on Amazon. All in all i'm happy witht the tool. Much better than hand scraping. I wear a full face mask and a respiraor
....huh?
RJT-I know a little about lasers from some research I did a few years ago which may or may not still be valid. But here goes...Laser safety is governed by the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) which has guidelines for how each laser is classified. This depends on the "on time" of the laser, wavelength, beam shape, power, etc. The IEC also provides a method for calculating the critical parameters which boils down to power/unit area/unit time.
I should mention as an editorial - I've found these guidlines somewhat confusing and they look like the might be easily fudge-able. That said, all the tools I've seen lasers on, are "Class 1 Laser Products" which, if I recall correctly, means they are safe under reasonably forseeable conditions with no protective eye glasses. I wouldn't buy a product that was not Class 1 eye safe. That said I still don't look at the beam emitter and I'd advise others not to.
I think he was responding to another post and responded to yours with comments for the other1 - measure the board twice, 2 - cut it once, 3 - measure the space where it is supposed to go 4 - get a new board and go back to step 1
You can tell the potential for harm from the class of the laser. There are four classes, I, II, III, and IV, with some subclasses. The lower the class, the lower the risk. Risk is based on whether there is enough power in the laser to damage the eye, or in stronger lasers, to burn skin or set things on fire.
Class I lasers are so weak that staring at a spot they make on a surface or even looking directly into the beam for a reasonable time will not cause harm.
Class II lasers can cause harm if you stare into the beam for more than ΒΌ second, but you can look at the spot without harm.
Class III lasers can be harmful from fairly brief looks directly at the beam, depending on the subclass.
Class IV lasers burn through things, set things on fire, and knock missiles out of the sky.
Here are more detailed discussions of laser classes. http://ehs.uky.edu/radiation/laser_fs.html http://www.laserinstitute.org/publications/safety_bulletin/laser_safety_info/
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