Construction Safety: Ladder Safety

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  • Опубліковано 20 вер 2024
  • Approximately 20% of work-related fall injuries involve ladders, and among construction workers, an estimated 81% of fall injuries treated in hospital emergency rooms involve a ladder. In this video, we will discuss best practices for ladder use and give you tips to keep you safe on every job.
    More information at www.nahb.org/e....
    #SAFETY365

КОМЕНТАРІ • 7

  • @ernestopobladormosquera6336
    @ernestopobladormosquera6336 3 роки тому +1

    Proud to be here part of history from Middle East Saudi Arabia KSA OFW PILIPINO always again and again watching 3 X a day in every day in 24 / 7.

  • @jbgoogl
    @jbgoogl 3 роки тому +14

    At 4:20 (how appropriate) the ladder is set up 12' high jutting 4' out. Shouldn't that be 3' out if you follow the 4:1 ratio?

  • @LadderMover
    @LadderMover Рік тому

    Tip: When moving a heavy extension ladder more than a few feet, first lower it, then carry it horizontally using a ladder mover.

  • @drseuss8589
    @drseuss8589 3 роки тому +1

    Most deaths or paralysis occur getting 6' step ladders as the break point is between the second and third vertebrae where the average neck line contacts the ground
    If you're going to fall, jump of vertically they say, then you land in your feet, hit your knees then with elbows protecting your head you roll into a ball then roll and turn impact force into kinetic rolling energy, but better off being tied off on a life line, it simple anchor bracket and rope, takes 5 minutes,
    Say you have a roof tie down anchor 25' from where you're working at a roof edge, it's 65' from the ground, 70' from the bottom of the elevator shaft, hook your rope around a roof truss right where you're working, so maybe an 8' straight fall would occur if you fell off a wall, however, if you didn't wrap your rope around a close framing member you might be in for a 20 foot fall at the point of drop in only to swing 15' back into a block wall and then your 6' lanyard, so, a 170 lb guy falls, he's at the end of his rope perspective to his fall location, but the anchor point is 25 feet back, he falls for 20 feet in a swing and smashes full velocity 15 feet away into a cmu wall, nominally, but the lanyard or rope with a built in lanyard system (which should then be only connected to your harness D ring and not your 6 foot lanyard) unleashes, so then a 20' swing drop becomes 26 feet of properly connected, or, if improperly connected becomes 6' on the rope with built in fall arrest plus the 20' of rope plus the additional 6' lanyard you're talking s 15' lateral positional fall at the drop point away from Anchorage, and a 32' drop to take you smashing into a concrete stair it elevator shaft, this needs to be reintegrated in OSHA cottages around the globe. It's sometimes impractical to move an anchor every ten minutes, but wrapping your rope around a close framing member plumb up from where you're working might be in order

  • @t-bonevlog6634
    @t-bonevlog6634 4 роки тому +1

    I need one

  • @cjsoutdoors4412
    @cjsoutdoors4412 2 роки тому

    You City of Mountain View North Parks crew better watch this tailgate! 🤣😂🤣🙄

  • @The_maradian
    @The_maradian Рік тому

    We can not talk about safety and have people in the video with no safety glasses, climbing ladders with no gloves etc. it is contradictory...