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  2. Infant and toddler safety - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Infant_and_toddler_safety

    Securing furniture and electronics, such as bookcases and TVs, so they cannot be pulled down on top of the baby. Using protective padding to cover sharp edges and corners, such as from a coffee table or fireplace hearth. Installing safety gates at the bottom and top of stairwells or to block entry to unsafe rooms.

  3. Chamfer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chamfer

    In machining a chamfer is a slope cut at any right-angled edge of a workpiece, e.g. holes; the ends of rods, bolts, and pins; the corners of the long-edges of plates; any other place where two surfaces meet at a sharp angle. Chamfering eases assembly, e.g. the insertion of bolts into holes, or nuts.

  4. Aichmophobia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aichmophobia

    A safety pin. Aichmophobia (/ ˌ eɪ k m ə ˈ f oʊ b i ə /) is a kind of specific phobia, the morbid fear of sharp things, [1] such as triangles, stars, squares, pencils, needles, knives, darts, prickly plants (like thistles and similar weeds), cactus trees, pine needles, broken glass, broken porcelain, sharp pieces of wood, a pointing finger, hexagons, or even the sharp end of an umbrella ...

  5. Guard rail - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guard_rail

    [10] [11] In the early 2000s, an Italian company added a version of a polymer bumper providing small bumpers for walls and equipment in the food industry. [citation needed] A Belgian company also introduced a flexible barrier in 2010 [12] and in 2014 a US based company introduced a hybrid polymer-steel guardrail for industrial environments. [13]

  6. Burr (edge) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Burr_(edge)

    The chamber is then evacuated of air and filled with an oxygen and fuel mix; this mixture is pressurized to 0.5 to 1.9 MPa (73 to 276 psi). An electrical igniter then ignites the mixture, which burns for approximately 20 milliseconds, causing all of the sharp corners and burrs to burn away. The peak temperature reaches 3,000 °C (5,430 °F). [7]

  7. Arris - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arris

    Underside of a groin vault showing the arris. In architecture, an arris is the sharp edge formed by the intersection of two surfaces, such as the corner of a masonry unit; [1] the edge of a timber in timber framing; the junction between two planes of plaster or any intersection of divergent architectural details.

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