Header

Winch/Tiedown Bar Strikes Driver’s Face

 

 

 

BACKGROUND: On a dry summer morning in the Appalachians, a log trucker was binding down a load of pine pulpwood at the landing.

PERSONAL CHARACTERISTICS: The 57-year-old driver was a contract trucker with 30 years of bus driving and contract log hauling experience. He was considered capable and had no physical disabilities. He was wearing gloves as he began tightening one of the binder straps on a triaxle truck.

UNSAFE ACT AND CONDITION Thetrucker was distracted as a crew member talked to him. He took his eye off the winch/tiedown bar and did not fully insert the bar into the ratcheting-wheel spindle as he was tightening the strap. His face was directly above the travel path of the winch bar.

ACCIDENT: When the driver pushed downwith the weight of his body to apply the final turn to the spindle, the winch bar popped out of the spindle hole and catapulted backward. The end that was near the spindle struck his face.

INJURY: The log trucker suffered a bloodynose and black eye. He received medical treatment and lost two days of work.

RECOMMENDATIONS FOR CORRECTION:

Ensure that the winch/tiedown bar stays fully inserted into the spindle when tightening a binder strap.

Make sure the cranking mechanism is workingproperly, and ensure that the ratchet pawl is fully engaged in the ratchet wheel.

Always keep head and body away from thestrike zone of the bar/handle.

Wear the required PPE—gloves, hard hat,and eye protection—when binding a load.

Give full attention to the task at hand; stop if distracted.

COURTESY OF THE FOREST RESOURCES ASSOCIATION: forestresources.org

Latest News

Strategic Biofuels Publishes Forestry Feedstock Guide

      Strategic Biofuels, a renewable fuels project development company, has published a  free resource, “A Practical Guide to Forestry Feedstock Under the Renewable Fuel Standard.” This first-of-its-kind practical guide aims to help guide project...

BARKO Future Forestry Equipment Dealers

BARKO Future Forestry Equipment Dealers

     Sponsored Content provided by BARKO   While product brands, like BARKO, and the other guys, typically spend a lopsided amount of energy, time, financial resources and other organizational bandwidth educating loggers about the finer points of...

Have A Question?

Send Us A Message