Title: Agricultural Engineering
1Agricultural Engineering
2Careers In Agricultural Engineering
Ag. Safety Engineer
3Careers In Agricultural Engineering
- Engineering Careers
- Designers
- Four year degrees (B.S)
- Mechanical Careers
- Operators
- Majority are two year degrees
- Education varies with the type of working
conditions
4Safety
- Objective
- Interpret personal safety hazards related to
careers and work in the field of agricultural
engineering
5Safety
- 50 of all farm related accidents involve working
with machinery - The definition of safety
- Developing an environment free from danger, risk,
or injury - Impossible to accomplish
- The 1 key to shop safety is the people who use
it!
6Principles of Safety
- Keep the shop clean
- Prevents tripping and related injury
- Remove unnecessary hazards
- Example- oily rags
- Make sure all safety shields are in place
- Do not use broken equipment
7Principles of Safety
- Wear appropriate protective clothing and devices
- Safety glasses and goggles to protect against
dust and flying objects - Steel toed shoes
- Ear plugs where noise exceeds 90dB (decibels)
8Equipment and Tool Safety
- Hammers
- Make sure the handle of the hammer fits tightly
on the head - Do not strike a hard steel surface with a steel
hammer (ex hammer vs. hammer) - Always wear safety glasses
- Discard a hammer with a chipped or mushroomed
face - Replace loose or cracked handles
- Discard hammers with cracked claws or eye sections
9Portable Circular Saw
- Keep the fingers away from the trigger when
carrying the saw - Do not wedge the guard in the open position
- The blade rotates at a very high speed
- never place on a surface before the blade stops
- Prevent Kickback
- Do not start the saw with the blade touching the
stock (wood)
10Safety Color Coding
- Development
- National organizations worked together
- American Society of Agricultural Engineers
- Safety Committee Of the American Vocational
Association
11Safety Color Coding
- Red
- Areas of danger
- Safety switches
- Fire extinguishers
- Red Danger
12Safety Color Coding
- Orange
- Wheels
- Levers
- Knobs
- Orange Warning
13Safety Color Coding
- Yellow
- Wheels, levers, and knobs that adjust or control
machines - Yellow Caution
14Safety Color Coding
- Blue
- Out of Order
- Broken shop equipment
- Blue Information
15Safety Color Coding
- Green
- First Aid
- Safety Equipment
- Green Safety
16Fire Hazards
- The Fire Triangle
- Components necessary for a fire to take place
- Fuel
- Any combustible material that will burn
- Heat
- Most material will burn if they are made hot
- Oxygen
- Gas in the air that is not a fuel but must be
present for material to burn
17Fire Hazards
- Fire Prevention
- Take away one of the components of the fuel
triangle - Fire will stop or will not start
- Safe storage of fuels
- Clean shop facilities
18Fire Extinguishers
- Know the kind of fire
- Class A- Ordinary combustibles
- paper, wood, cloth
- Class B- Fuel fires
- gas, oil
- Class C- Electrical fires
- Class D- Combustible metals
19Fire Extinguishers
20Fire Extinguishers
- Smothering a fire
- Best used of a person whose clothes are on fire
- Wrap the person in a blanket to cut off the
oxygen to the fire
21Planning An Agricultural Project
- Blueprints are used to plan projects
- Simple designs
- Sharp lead pencil with an eraser
- Protractor
- Ruler (12)
- Compass
22Planning An Agricultural Project
- Detailed plans
- Drawing board to attach paper
- Masking tape
- T square for drawing horizontal lines
- Right triangle for vertical lines
- Scale
- Instrument with increments shortened according to
proportion - Flat scale- looks like a ruler
- Triangular scale- three sided, but 6 scales
23Planning An Agricultural Project
- The basics of drawings
- Sketch
- Rough drawing with no demensions
- Pictorial drawing
- Shows all three views
- Top
- Side or end
- Front
24Planning An Agricultural Project
25Planning An Agricultural Project
- The basics of drawings (continued)
- A scale drawing represents objects in exact
proportions - If the scale is ¼1 then ¼ on the drawing
would equal 1 foot on the object - So. A 2 line on the drawing would equal what on
the object? - 8 feet
- Scale will vary depending on the size of the
object
26Class Assignment Your group will construct a 6
foot picnic table using the materials
provided. Your grade will depend on how well you
follow the blueprint and how well you complete
the project.
27Planning An Agricultural Project
- Determining Materials
- Bill of material
- List and description of materials needed to
complete a project - BF board foot
28Board Feet
- Thickness (inches) X Width (inches) Length (feet)
- 12
- How many board feet are in a board 1 X 12 X 8?
- 1 X 12 X 8
- 12
BF
29Board Feet
- Assignment
- Calculate the board feet required to build our
class project - (24) 2X6X12
- (4) 2X6X10
- (8) 2X4X10