HEALTH AND SAFETY CRITERIA FOR ABRASIVE BLAST CLEANING OPERATIONS
This article presents the basic findings of a NIOSH- sponsored study that involved an evaluation of pressure- blast cleaning operations as they presently exist. The study began with an assessment of equipment within the shops and laboratories of various manufacturers. This was followed by field surveys of operational abrasive-blast cleaning equipment at various plant locations, i.e., shipyards, foundries, steel mills, steel fabricating plants, and within a gas-distribution station. In summary, hazardous conditions were found at most locations. Many operators were breathing contaminated air, and personal protective equipment was wanting and poorly maintained, as was the abrasive-blast cleaning equipment itself. There is a need for corrective action to develop, enact, and enforce safety and health standards to effectively control the hazards present in abrasive-cleaning operations.
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Corporate Authors:
American Society of Safety Engineers
850 Busse Highway
Park Ridge, IL United States 60068 -
Authors:
- Goodier, J L
- Hughes, R T
- Publication Date: 1975-5
Media Info
- Pagination: p. 38-43
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Serial:
- Professional Safety
- Volume: 20
- Issue Number: 5
- Publisher: American Society of Safety Engineers
Subject/Index Terms
- TRT Terms: Air pollution; Blast cleaning; Noise control; Safety; Sand blasting; Shipyards
- Old TRIS Terms: Air pollution (Sand blasting); Shipyard safety
- Subject Areas: Maintenance and Preservation; Marine Transportation; Safety and Human Factors;
Filing Info
- Accession Number: 00097587
- Record Type: Publication
- Source Agency: American Society of Safety Engineers
- Files: TRIS
- Created Date: Jul 29 1975 12:00AM