firesafety. I can see that your biro would work if the guard was immediately adjacent to the danger point.
As example a fixed double angle in front of the inrunning nip between two rollers on e.g. a printing press.
The tables showing the relationship between distance from danger and maximum permissible opening were updated in 1975, when investigations found that previous guidance worked for white men but not for the increasing proportion of the industrial workforce who were of other sex and/or ethnicity.
So, as example, apparently women of Asian origin working in the textiles factories in places such as Leicester had long thin fingers which were getting through the gaps in the fixed guards and getting caught in dangerous machinery.
However, the relevant table in BS5304 assumed that a gap of no more than 6mm was good enough - would protect presumably at least 95% [standard statistical basis] of the workforce.
Now I have measured my biro - 6mm across. So entirely OK as a "test finger" where the guard is immediately alongside the danger point.
But, if the guard is set a distance back from the danger point then specifying a maximum of 6mm would be entirely OTT.
I can imagine the engineeers in the factory you were advising struggling when you demanded the replacement of guards which might be entirely compliant with the requirements of the relevant BS EN standard - and if relatively new, the manufacturers of the machines also.
How would you propose to get the gap betwen the top guard of a huge circular saw and the top of a UK grown tree trunk it is cutting down to 6mm? It's NOT "practicable", let alone "reasonably practicable" and this was recognised in legislation in 1922. The shape of tree trunks hasn't changed in the last 101 years.
....and even if you can keep that gap down to the 12mm set in the 1922 and then 1974 Woodworking Machines Regulations if the operation is hand fed then there is still a sizeable amount of unguarded saw blade above the table once the material has gone through.
Now let's move on beyond the tree trunk and assume that we are cutting "squared stock". It could be say 50mm thick. You can feed it through a tunnel guard, but that guard is going to have an opening of much more than 6mm so your biro test isn't going to work.
You could, of course ban the use of any machine where the opening is more than 6mm.
If so, how will we produce scaffold boards, or MDF doors for your kitchen?
May be we should simply export all manufacturing and leave others to clean up the blood?
I have worked on large power presses making, amongst things, "motor vehicle parts". They had "sweep away" guards to stop my head or any other part of my body being crushed between the tools of a 400 ton press. The guard did what it said - it swept me out of the way BEFORE the top tool(s) came down.