The PSC Field Guide to No-Touch Load Control
and Hand Exposure Elimination
A field doctrine for suspended load safety, no-touch operations, and engineered hand exposure elimination across heavy industry. Built for oil & gas, steel plants, mining, marine logistics, power, fabrication, and high-consequence industrial operations where workers still use hands to guide, position, steady, retrieve, align, and seat hazardous loads.
Traditional hand safety programs focus heavily on gloves, PPE, behaviour, and worker compliance. These remain important — but they often accept that the hand will still enter the hazard. The worker still guides the load. The worker still steadies the object. The worker still aligns the final position.
PSC's doctrine asks a different question: Why is the worker's hand required to be there at all? The goal is not only to protect the hand after exposure exists. The goal is to redesign the task so the worker controls the hazard from a safer distance using engineered methods, no-touch interfaces, and tool-based control systems.
"The real hand safety problem is not only the absence of protection. It is the continued presence of exposure."
Study the real industrial task — not only the written procedure. Observe where workers stand, how the load moves, where the hand enters, and what corrections the worker attempts to make.
Determine what the hand is actually doing: guiding, pushing, pulling, steadying, retrieving, aligning, holding, or seating.
Study pinch points, crush zones, impact exposure, suspended load interfaces, line-of-fire conditions, stored energy, and final seating hazards.
Replace direct hand contact with a tool-based control method using push/pull tools, taglines, retrieval tools, magnetic interfaces, or engineered operational redesign.
Embed the no-touch method into SOPs, lift plans, toolbox talks, contractor briefings, and operational standards.
The hand is not the control. The tool is the control. Distance between the worker and the hazard is the goal.
Exposure peaks during the final stage — not the lift, but the moment workers step in to position and seat the load.
Suspended loads, pipe handling, deck movement, cargo baskets, rigging exposure, tagline retrieval, and final equipment positioning.
Coil handling, slabs, plates, truck loading, crane hooks, moving steel, pinch zones, and high-force positioning tasks.
Heavy maintenance, moving assemblies, suspended components, confined access, and line-of-fire exposure.
Deck operations, container handling, moving cargo, vessel motion, and high-consequence suspended load control.
Turbines, heavy assemblies, positioning operations, equipment installation, and controlled load movement.
Hot-zone exposure, casting movement, proximity hazards, and engineered distance for high-temperature operations.
A field guide for suspended load safety, no-touch load control, and engineered hand exposure elimination across heavy industry. Complimentary for qualifying industrial operations.
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