Engineering workflow separation from hazard exposure. Five systems. One operational philosophy.
PSC does not supply tools.
PSC engineers the conditions under which the hand
no longer needs to enter the hazard zone.
Hand injuries do not persist because workers are careless. They persist because industrial workflows structurally require human proximity to uncontrolled energy — and that architecture has never been challenged. This publication introduces five engineering systems that begin to change that architecture.
"The future of hand safety may be defined less by how well the hand is protected — and more by how rarely it enters the hazard zone."
PSC OPERATIONAL DOCTRINEThe hierarchy of controls has long established that engineering controls — changes to the workflow itself — outperform procedural and PPE-based responses. In practice, however, most industrial operations remain at the bottom of this hierarchy: personal protective equipment is deployed while the workflow that creates proximity remains untouched. PSC exists to address the tier above PPE.
Hands-free operation is not a tool category. It is an operational philosophy. When a workflow is redesigned so the hand is no longer required to guide, stabilize, align, or retrieve within a hazard zone, the exposure moment disappears entirely. The injury cannot occur because the proximity event no longer happens. That is the standard PSC engineering systems are designed to achieve.
Workers place their hands in hazard zones because the task demands it — not because they are unaware of the risk. Suspended loads require guidance. Structures require alignment. Drill pipes require stabilization. Without engineered alternatives, the hand remains the only available precision instrument. PSC systems replace that instrument with designed distance.
PSC does not evaluate its role by the volume of tools shipped. It evaluates its role by the number of exposure moments eliminated from the workflows it serves. This distinction — between transactional supply and engineered outcome — defines every system in this publication and every engagement PSC has with the organisations that deploy them.
"Engineering maturity begins where manual exposure starts disappearing."
"The hand is not a control system."
"Hands-free is not a tool category. It is an operational philosophy."
"The dangerous phase is often the last few inches."
When a load is in motion — lifted, swinging, or traveling — the hazard moves with it. The highest-risk phase is not the lift itself. It is the moment of positioning, final placement, and retrieval, where instinctive manual intervention begins and the hand enters the load's energy envelope.
"The highest exposure phase is rarely the lift itself. It is the positioning and final placement phase — where instinctive manual intervention begins, and the hand enters the load's energy envelope without a formal decision being made."
Suspended load operations create five structurally predictable exposure moments: approach, alignment, stabilization, final placement, and retrieval. In each phase, workers instinctively use their hands to guide, position, or control a load that is connected to mechanical energy and subject to gravity, inertia, and swing. Standard tagline ropes — improvised or untested — create tangle risks, hand entanglement zones, and unpredictable load behavior that increases, not decreases, the proximity hazard.
PSC Suspended Load Exposure Reduction Systems are designed to replace manual intervention with engineered distance. Taglines that resist tangle and retain shape. Push-pull tools that control load trajectory from a safe standoff. Retrieval systems that recover lines without entering the red zone. Each component addresses a specific exposure moment in the suspended load lifecycle.
"The dangerous phase is not the lift.
It is the moment someone says: 'Just hold it for a second.'"
That instruction is given thousands of times across Indian industry every day. It is not reckless. It is the workflow requiring what the workflow was never redesigned to avoid.
Rigid Polyex 12mm rope with 6mm core construction prevents swivelling, knot formation, and the entanglement behavior that makes conventional rope taglines a hazard in their own right. Helix spiral improves grip in wet conditions. High-visibility yellow with colour-coded eyes for rigging identification.
10, 15, 20, 25, 30, 35, 45 ft — Part Series: PSC-LGTC
High-visibility coating that repels corrosive materials and remains effective in low-light conditions. Knot-free, shape-retaining construction replaces hazardous conventional rope. Designed for chemical plant, offshore, and heavy lifting environments where conventional rope degradation creates secondary exposure risk.
10, 15, 20, 25, 30, 35, 45 ft — Part Series: PSC-WEB-TLD
Fiberglass push-pull pole with heavy-duty nylon head enables load positioning, guiding, spotting, and landing without direct hand contact. Designed for suspended loads, crane operations, and drill pipe manoeuvring. Reduces caught-between and struck-by incidents during final placement operations.
21", 42", 50", 72", 96" — Part Series: PSC-LG
Fiberglass pole with strong heavy-duty nylon head specifically engineered for suspended load spotting, landing guidance, and drill pipe and tubular manoeuvring. The Guide-It addresses the final placement phase — the highest-exposure moment in most suspended load operations.
21", 42", 50", 72", 96" — Part Series: PSC-GIT
Collapsed to 4ft, extending to 7ft, this retrieval system allows workers to recover taglines and rigging lines without entering the suspended load red zone beneath the hook. Rubber buffer functions simultaneously as push-pull tool for confined-space load guidance during retrieval operations.
Collapsed: 4ft (1.2m) · Extended: 7ft (2.13m) — Part: PSC-TRT
Three-stage extendable safety tool reaching 12 feet — designed specifically for tagline retrieval without entering the hazardous red zone beneath suspended loads. Aluminium inner pole provides lightweight high-reach capability across crane, offshore platform, and construction environments where load-deck distances are large.
Base: 6ft · Extended: 12ft — Part: PSC-TRT-3P
14mm polyester construction with 25kN galvanised steel composite swivel hook. 2" hook opening with safety latch for secure load attachment. Designed for environments requiring rated, certified tagline systems with controlled engagement mechanics. Replaces improvised rope arrangements in formal lift plans.
5, 10, 15, 20 metres — Part Series: PSC-GISRT
Non-slip grip, aluminium shaft with dual release system — spring-loaded noose release or slide control — for safe engagement and retrieval of drill pipes, tubulars, and cylindrical suspended loads. Keeps the rigger's hands outside the pinch zone during pipe handling, racking, and stabbing operations.
36", 48", 60" — Part Series: PSC-TG
Where tools strike, compress, or drive force through a work surface, the hand that holds the workpiece sits in the direct path of energy transfer. The impact zone and the stabilization zone share the same geometry. Engineering separation between them is not optional — it is the definition of an engineered control.
"The hand should not absorb, stabilize, or guide industrial energy. When it does, the workflow has failed at the engineering level — not the behavioural one."
Striking tools — flogging spanners, hammers, chisels, punches — require that the workpiece be held, positioned, or guided while the striking force is applied. In the absence of engineered holding systems, the hand performs that function. The worker is aware of the risk. The workflow provides no alternative. The hand enters the impact zone not out of carelessness but because the task demands it.
Pinch points, crush zones, and impact areas share a common characteristic: the worker's hand must be close to them for the task to be completed. PSC Line-of-Fire Separation Systems engineer that proximity out of the workflow. The workpiece is held. The hand is not in the striking path. The energy transfer is completed. The hand was never required to be there.
"The intervention lasts three seconds.
The exposure lasts less than one."
In spanner and chisel work, the contact event and the injury event are near-simultaneous. PPE absorbs the consequence. It does not move the hand out of the striking path. Only an engineered holder does that.
Engineered to provide the same mechanical support that fingers and hands would otherwise supply when using flogging spanners and large impact tools. The Fingersaver holds, positions, and stabilizes the workpiece so the hand is removed entirely from the striking path. Tested across typical heavy-industry spanner applications. Three lengths address compact, standard, and extended reach requirements.
Compact: 295mm · Standard: 375mm · Long: 850mm
Part Series: PSC-FS
Ergonomic design provides a comfortable and firm grip that replicates the mechanical function of the hand while keeping fingers outside the strike zone. Accepts chisels up to 1" diameter. Designed for environments where chiselling, punching, or driving operations require workpiece stabilization that currently demands manual hold-down. The hand is replaced by a designed mechanical grip.
Fits chisels up to 1" diameter — Part: PSC-CPH
Die-cast aluminium, 2kg — provides a structured grip system for lifting and moving gas cylinders that eliminates the awkward manual contact that creates pinch, crush, and drop exposure. Warm-touch durable coating maintains operator comfort in extreme temperature environments. The GasGrab addresses the instinctive grab that workers make when cylinder handling becomes unstable during movement.
215, 230, 235, 254, 267mm — Part Series: PSC-GG
Steel handling, structural assembly, and fabrication create alignment exposure that is invisible until the load is close. When the structural element must match a bolt pattern, a weld joint, or a bearing surface to within millimetres, workers close the distance to provide the precision the workflow demands. Remote positioning systems eliminate that closing requirement.
"Remote positioning is not a convenience feature. It is an exposure reduction system. The distance between the worker and the steel is the measurement of the engineering control."
Ferrous objects — steel plates, structural sections, fabricated assemblies, coils, billets — require manual intervention during alignment and final placement operations that conventional mechanical handling cannot complete with sufficient precision. Workers use their hands to guide, align, push, and nudge steel that is still under the influence of crane tension or forklift pressure. The compression point between the moving steel and the receiving structure is the exposure zone.
PSC Remote Positioning and Alignment Systems deploy magnetic engagement technology and engineered standoff tools to provide that precision from a controlled distance. The steel is held. The alignment is achieved. The worker's hands were never required to be inside it.
"Most exposure does not begin with risk-taking.
It begins with workflow dependency."
The steel plate is 400kg. The crane has placed it within 20mm of its landing position. Without a magnetic alignment tool, the final correction requires a hand between the plate and the receiving beam. The worker knows this. So does the supervisor. Neither designed the workflow that requires it.
550 lbs magnetic grip rating. Designed for positioning, aligning, and controlling heavy steel objects from a safe standoff distance. The permanent magnet engages the ferrous surface at pole contact — the worker's hands remain on the non-ferrous pole, outside the pinch zone between the steel and its receiving structure. Available in multiple lengths for different operational reach requirements.
500 lbs · 2, 4, 6, 8 ft — Part Series: PSC-LIT-MG
180-degree swivel head with 275 lbs magnetic rating. Adjustable reach from 4 to 8 feet via threaded locking mechanism provides variable standoff for different steel positioning geometries. The swivel head allows the worker to engage and redirect steel position without repositioning their body into the convergence zone — maintaining consistent safe distance throughout the alignment operation.
275 lbs · 4 to 8 ft adjustable — Part: PSC-LIT-MAG-FG008
Versatile standoff pole system with S, M, J, T, L and angled head options — each engineered for a specific load engagement geometry. Used to push, pull, guide, reposition, and stabilize suspended items and equipment across crane, fabrication, and material handling operations. The interchangeable head system means one pole body provides a complete remote manipulation capability across an entire facility's workflow diversity.
2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12 ft · S / M / J / T / L / Angled — Part Series: PSC-LIT-S
V-shaped engagement head stabilizes suspended loads by engaging container corners with a pushing action. Angled design creates a locking mechanism for enhanced load directional control. U-shaped attachment variant fits 4-inch box iron frames of open baskets and power packs for offshore and heavy lifting environments. Designed specifically for the final placement phase where manual correction behaviour is most normalized.
V-Head · U-Head — Part: PSC-GLHT-1300/1500
Multifunctional rigging tool designed for riggers to push, pull, and position ropes, chains, slings, and suspended load rigging without placing hands in the danger zone during engagement. Addresses the most common source of crush and pinch exposure in rigging operations — the moment of hook engagement, chain threading, or sling repositioning when the load is under tension and the rigging geometry is compressing.
PSC-RMH
In continuous process environments — moving lines, transfer systems, pipe racks, and process infrastructure — exposure is not a discrete event. It is woven into the rhythm of the operation. A crane lift creates five exposure moments per day. A production line creates five per hour. The brief, familiar, unremarkable reach is its own hazard category.
"The most dangerous interventions are often the shortest ones. The quick reach to clear a jam. The momentary hand that steadies a pipe. The instinctive grab that happens before the risk assessment begins."
Process industry environments differ from discrete lifting operations in one critical respect: exposure frequency. A crane lift may create five exposure moments per day. A production line creates five per hour. Pipe handling, drum movement, hose management, and transfer operations create a continuous background of manual intervention that individually appears low-risk and collectively creates significant injury potential.
The normalization of manual intervention in process environments is its own hazard category. Workers reach into moving lines to clear material. They grab hoses to redirect flow. They manoeuvre pipes with their bodies rather than with purpose-built tools. Each intervention is brief, familiar, and unremarkable — until it is not. PSC Continuous Process Exposure Reduction Systems are designed to interrupt this normalization cycle at the workflow level.
"In continuous process environments, the injury is often not the result of one dangerous moment — it is the result of thousands of acceptable ones."
Double U-shaped attachment engineered for stabilizing suspended drill pipes up to 5⅞ inches in vertical position. Enables fluid transition between push and pull functions for enhanced directional control during pipe stand-up, racking, and stabbing operations. Designed specifically for drilling environments where conventional manual pipe handling creates repeated hand and finger exposure at the pipe connection zone.
1200mm / 1500mm length — Part: PSC-GSBT-1200/1500
10" pipe grab head designed for moving suspended large-diameter pipes, drill tools, bulk hoses, and BOP service lines. Complements tagline systems by providing exceptional load control and landing flexibility for large-diameter cylindrical loads. Addresses the specific manual correction exposure created when conventional tools lose engagement with circular load profiles during the final landing phase.
PSC-GPGT-1500
Facilitates drill pipe and casing alignment during stabbing operations while keeping rigger hands clear of the pin-and-box connection zone. Positive-grip handles minimize slip risk. Thread protection function prevents connection damage — eliminating both the safety exposure and the costly thread repair that manual stabbing processes create when alignment is achieved by hand pressure rather than engineered guidance.
3", 5", 5½" — Part: PSC-PSG
Locks onto any hose or pipe and allows workers to move it while standing in a natural, upright position. Transforms an awkward bent-over manual drag into an ergonomically sound handled carry — eliminating the back exposure, the grip strain, and the instability that occurs when workers manoeuvre long flexible pipework without a purpose-built engagement interface.
2", 4", 6" — Part Series: PSC-HTL
Cumulative exposure is not less serious because it accumulates slowly. Manual handling without engineered grip support creates instability, awkward load geometry, and fatigue — each of which increases the probability that the hand will be in the wrong position when the load shifts. Ergonomic exposure reduction systems redesign the contact interface between the worker and the load.
"An ergonomic system is not a comfort improvement. It is a workflow redesign that removes the instability, awkwardness, and grip strain that create secondary exposure — the exposure that occurs when the primary handling task goes momentarily wrong."
Manual material handling without ergonomic support creates two categories of hand exposure. The first is direct: awkward grip geometry places the hand in a mechanically disadvantaged position, increasing the probability of contact with edges, corners, and pinch surfaces. The second is systemic: fatigue accumulates over a shift, grip strength diminishes, and load control degrades — creating the conditions for the dropped load, the shifted grip, and the crushed finger that occurs not because of inattention but because the workflow was never designed for the human hand's actual biomechanical limits.
PSC Ergonomic Exposure Reduction Systems address both categories. The lift is made stable. The grip is made secure. The load's contact geometry is engineered. The hand remains in the position the workflow intended — not the position fatigue and instability created.
"The pipe has been lifted this way every day for three years.
Nobody has been injured. Nobody calls it unsafe."
Frequency without incident is not evidence of safety. It is evidence of tolerance. Cumulative ergonomic exposure accumulates invisibly in incident data until the moment it produces a result — at which point everyone agrees the task should have been redesigned years earlier.
Engineered manual lifting aids that prevent back strain and eliminate the direct hand contact exposure created when small equipment is lifted and carried without a formal grip interface. Three configurations — single handle, double handle, and choke valve — address different load geometries, weights, and movement requirements. The Lift Assist system transforms a manual lift into a handled carry, removing the instability that makes manual lifting the source of secondary pinch and crush exposure.
Single Handle: 50mm × 900mm · Double Handle: 50mm × 1500mm
Choke Valve: 25mm width — Parts: PSC-SH-75 / PSC-DH-100 / PSC-CV
Keeps the wrist and hand in a neutral ergonomic position during pipe lifting and carrying operations, eliminating the grip strain and wrist torque that conventional pipe lifting creates. Simultaneously protects against pinched fingers and sharp surface contact during the engagement and release phases. Designed for environments where pipe handling frequency is high and cumulative hand exposure accumulates below the threshold of formal risk assessment — until an injury occurs.
PSC-EZL
2kg die-cast aluminium cylinder handling system with warm-touch durable coating for extreme-temperature environments. The GasGrab replaces the instinctive wrap-around grip that workers use on smooth cylinder bodies — a grip geometry that fails predictably when cylinders are wet, coated, or top-heavy. By providing a designed ergonomic handle interface, the GasGrab removes the instability event that causes most cylinder-related hand injuries.
215, 230, 235, 254, 267mm — Part Series: PSC-GG
"If the hand is part of the task, the task needs to change."
"An organisation that has redesigned its first workflow has begun a different kind of industrial safety programme."
"The villain is not the worker who reached in. It is the workflow that was never redesigned so they did not have to."
"The goal is not a lower injury rate.
The goal is a workflow that no longer requires the hand to be at risk."
"Up to 85% reduction in recorded hand injuries has been documented when No-Touch operational systems are systematically deployed across workflows — not as supplemental equipment, but as the primary engineering control replacing manual intervention. The number reflects not better protection. It reflects a redesigned workflow."
PSC does not evaluate its contribution
by the number of tools supplied —
but by the number of exposure moments
permanently removed from the workflows
of the organisations it serves.
PSC HAND SAFETY INDIA PRIVATE LIMITED
NO-TOUCH OPERATIONS FRAMEWORK · INDUSTRIAL EXPOSURE REDUCTION SYSTEMS · VISAKHAPATNAM, INDIA
+91 9100932334
+91 9603166448
3rd Floor, Founta Plaza
Suryabagh, Visakhapatnam
Andhra Pradesh 530020
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