No, that's your idea, I was doing the job, the person hurt was only looking at the gages to see what the readings were.
You still haven't answered my question, how is any of these forms going to stop impulsive actions by others even when they are already trained in the task? this guy knows how to do compression checks he has completed many in the past. and has already told me it was a dumb move to touch the prop.
Here's something that even you can't try to argue against.....
Who signs the log books as the mechanic who completed said compression tests? If it's your name Tom, then who on earth could possibly be considered the Task Supervisor?
Golly, I think that's you...isn't it?
Instead of blaming a mistake on your customer, why not try to change your complacent behavior so no one ever gets hurt while your working on a plane again. It's as easy and making them aware, you're the largest piece to the injury puzzle and you dont even have the decency, nay... courage to say "I'll never let this happen again."
You just wanna argue and get mad because you thought we'd all jump on the "your customers an idiot bandwagon". Well, we aren't buying that, you should of been more assertive and told him to get back or be more aware.
If I'm in the presence of a professional, I trust them to let me know what's going on. Just like I trust the CFI teaching me to fly, your hard headedness won't change anything and I fear this accident won't change your outlook either.
THAT'S REALLY SCARY.
Edit: The forms (JSA'S) tell you the job steps, dangers of each step and how to mitigate them. They aren't magic buffers against stupid, but they do bring attention to the hazards so you don't have to say "I should a told you about that" after a prop slices his head.
It will also vindicate you in a civil trial if someone was to say "he didn't tell me anything" because you go over it and have them sign it. However, if you are grossly negligent, nothing can save you.