Hazards, line-of-fire risks, and engineering controls for safe lifting operations across industrial environments. Built for facilities where worker exposure elimination is the only acceptable standard.
A structured overview of the primary hazard categories and their associated risk profiles during lifting operations.
| Hazard | Risk Description |
|---|---|
| Load Swing | Uncontrolled movement pulling workers directly into danger zones around suspended loads |
| Line-of-Fire Exposure | Workers positioned inside movement paths of suspended loads during positioning and travel |
| Pinch Points | Hands trapped between suspended loads and surrounding structures, floors, or equipment |
| Rotational Movement | Unexpected turning or shifting of suspended loads creating unpredictable hazard zones |
| Load Landing | Crush hazards present during final placement and alignment of suspended loads |
| Rigging Failure | Sudden load movement or dropped objects resulting from rigging system compromise |
| Manual Positioning | Direct hand exposure during load guidance, stabilization, and landing operations |
Most injuries involving suspended loads occur during normal operations — not catastrophic equipment failures.
PPE alone cannot stop a suspended load from moving. Engineering controls and exposure elimination are the only reliable path to worker safety.
Traditional lifting operations rely on workers physically interacting with suspended loads during positioning and landing. PSC's no-touch philosophy fundamentally changes this dynamic.
"The objective is not safer interaction with suspended loads. The objective is eliminating unnecessary hand exposure altogether."
Modern no-touch methods include remote positioning systems, push-pull tools, hands-free rigging, extended-reach devices, and controlled landing systems.
Suspended load hazards are present across industrial sectors. Each environment carries unique risk factors that demand targeted no-touch solutions.
Slab handling, coil positioning, ladle movement, billet lifting, and roll change operations in confined spaces where line-of-fire exposure is amplified.
Vessel movement, unstable lifting conditions, environmental forces, and restricted work areas create rapidly unpredictable suspended load behavior.
Continuous container movement, cargo transfer, and ship loading operations expose workers to constant moving load paths and struck-by hazards.
Structural component lifting, formwork handling, and material placement in dynamic site environments with variable conditions and multiple hazard zones.
Assembly line rigging, component positioning, and maintenance lifting activities where tight operational clearances increase pinch-point exposure.
Heavy equipment maintenance, turbine handling, and infrastructure lifting operations where suspended load safety is critical to operational continuity.
Core questions from safety professionals and operations teams working to reduce suspended load exposure.
Explore PSC's no-touch frameworks, operational methodologies, and engineering controls for your facility.
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