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Printing Instructions
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U. S. Department of Labor
Occupational Safety and Health Administration
Directorate of Science, Technology and Medicine
Office of Science and Technology Assessment
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Hazards of Unintended Movement of Dump Truck Body Beds
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Safety and Health Information Bulletin |
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SHIB 09-18-2006 |
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This Safety and Health Information Bulletin is not a
standard or regulation, and it creates no new legal obligations. The Bulletin is
advisory in nature, informational in content, and is intended to assist
employers in providing a safe and healthful workplace. Pursuant to the
Occupational Safety and Health Act, employers must comply with hazard-specific safety and health
standards promulgated by OSHA or by a state with an OSHA-approved state plan. In
addition, pursuant to Section 5(a)(1), the General Duty Clause of the Act,
employers must provide their employees with a workplace free from recognized
hazards likely to cause death or serious physical harm. Employers can be cited
for violating the General Duty Clause if there is a recognized hazard and they
do not take reasonable steps to prevent or abate the hazard. However, failure to
implement any recommendations in this Safety and Health Information Bulletin is
not, in itself, a violation of the General Duty Clause. Citations can only be
based on standards, regulations, and the General Duty Clause. This SHIB does not
constitute an endorsement by OSHA of any one specific engineered method to
reduce or eliminate the hazard that is a subject of this SHIB. |
Preface
Performing maintenance work underneath the dump body of a dump truck presents extraordinary hazards to maintenance or servicing personnel. During an OSHA inspection at a heavy construction equipment maintenance shop, an employee was observed working between the elevated 4,000 pound dump body and the truck’s frame. The employee could not utilize the truck’s original “body prop” to support the dump body since the “body prop” would not position the dump body high enough for the employee to access the back of the truck. Consequently, employees place themselves under the elevated dump bed without proper protection.
A citation was issued for failing to provide lockout procedures while employees were working under the dump body and for failing to isolate and sufficiently block the dump body prior to doing work under the dump body. As a result, the employer contacted the University of Wisconsin-Madison Structures and Materials Testing Laboratory to develop truck bed brace brackets that would support loads over 47,000 lbs. This represented a significant engineering challenge and the positive outcome that resulted should be shared with other employers.
Purpose
The purpose of this Safety and Health Information Bulletin (SHIB) is to:
- Alert employers and employees who service or maintain dump trucks or haulage trucks about the hazard of falling dump truck beds;
- Remind employers that in construction settings,
29 CFR 1926.600(a)(3)(i) requires that dump bodies shall be fully lowered or blocked when being repaired or when not in use;
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29 CFR 1926.601(b)(10) also requires that in construction settings, trucks with dump bodies shall be equipped with positive means of support, permanently attached, and capable of being locked in position to prevent accidental lowering of the body while maintenance or inspection work is being done; and
- Detail actions to prevent unintended falling of the dump truck bed, which include implementing components of a lockout/tagout program.
Background
The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) reviewed its Integrated Management Information System (IMIS) accident data, and identified 31 accidents during the past 10 years that involved the unanticipated release or movement of an elevated truck bed. Nearly all of the accidents resulted in fatalities. OSHA urges employers whose employees service or maintain dump trucks to implement an effective Lockout/Tagout Program in general industry settings or to implement the above referenced construction standards in construction settings to prevent unintended releases or movement of the truck beds which can result in a employee’s death or serious injuries.
Typically, employee exposures occurred during routine maintenance or during troubleshooting activities. Work performed under the raised beds involved repairs to air or hydraulic lines, framework welding, electrical wires and release cables, power take-off shafts, hydraulic pumps, fuel pumps, and routine greasing. Body props were not used, or were used improperly, in a majority of the accidents. In a few cases, the props were used but they failed. Causes for the sudden movement of the dump bodies included: inadvertent control operation, inadvertently pulling a release cable, hydraulic failure, and premature reconnecting of an air line.
The following three sample OSHA cases illustrate some of the problems faced when using non-engineered dump body props. (Ref: OSHA IMIS).
- Example 1: An employee was replacing the rear stabilizer bar on a tandem dump truck. The dump bed was raised and the safety support was in place. At some point, the lift hydraulics for the dump bed failed, allowing the weight of the bed to rest on the safety support bracket which also failed, causing the bed to come down and crush the employee.
- Example 2: Two employees were installing a dump bed onto a dump truck. The dump bed was being raised up and down by slings attached to a bridge crane. The dump bed had been raised and lowered several times to make sure that the bed was aligned on the truck chassis correctly. The back of the dump bed was bolted in place. The dump bed was then raised one more time so that a tubular rod could be placed under the bed to hold it in the upright position while one employee worked under the raised bed. While placing the tubular rod under the dump bed, the safety latch on the crane hook failed. This allowed the slings to come off the hook. The dump bed pinned both of the employee’s arms under the bed between the chassis and the dump bed.
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Example 3: An employee was greasing the U-joints on a 1970 Mack dump truck. He had raised the dump bed and had propped it up with a 4’’ by 6’’ by 8’ piece of wood. The wood dislodged and the bed came down onto his back, pinning and seriously injuring him. The employee later died.
Figure 1. Body
props are commonly misused when raised
upright without having the weight of the bed supported or
braced. Body props are subject to rust and damage, and
need to be properly maintained.
For problems with accessibility in using figures and illustrations in this document, please contact the Directorate of Science, Technology and Medicine at (202) 693-2300.
One reason that the props provided by the truck body manufacturers are not used, or are not used appropriately, is that when raised to the typical body prop height, there may not be sufficient accessible space to perform the needed maintenance.
Mechanics need to access the rear of the truck where damage often occurs to air or hydraulic hoses, electrical lines, control cables and hydraulic motors. To access these areas, the truck body must be moved to a higher position than is supported by the manufacturer’s prop. In these circumstances, employers often need to provide additional bracing or support. However, if not properly designed to support the weight of the dump body, these methods can be ineffective and lead to serious accidents. Employers should therefore ensure that, before making inspections, adjustments, or repairs under dump truck bodies, strong, heavy, positive supports are used to keep the dump body from inadvertently lowering.
The supports/cribbing methods shown in Figures 2 and 3 are examples of makeshift body props that do not safely support the dump body in an elevated position. Since these makeshift devices are not designed to safely support the elevated dump body they can
inadvertently slip out of the truck frame while maintenance work is performed underneath the dump body.
Figure 2. Shows a wooden block makeshift body prop.
For problems with accessibility in using figures and illustrations in this document, please contact the Directorate of Science, Technology and Medicine at (202) 693-2300.
Figure 3. Shows a steel I-beam makeshift body prop: steel
I-beam sits across truck frame. The I-beam is not attached to
the truck frame or dump body. The I-beam could be displaced
in the direction of the arrow by the inadvertent movement of
the dump body or truck frame.
For problems with accessibility in using figures and illustrations in this document, please contact the Directorate of Science, Technology and Medicine at (202) 693-2300.
Truck Props
Strong, heavy, positive supports are provided by dump bed manufacturers in the form of body props. Body props are non-adjustable and will support the dump body at only one position that is close to the maximum elevated dump angle. Therefore, the need to inspect and/or work on the dump bed at an angle other than the one provided by the body prop will require additional or alternative protection.
Figure 4. Positive supports are provided by dump bed
manufacturers in the form of body props. Body props are
non-adjustable and will support the dump body at one
position only.
For problems with accessibility in using figures and illustrations in this document, please contact the Directorate of Science, Technology and Medicine at (202) 693-2300.
Truck Bed Brace Bracket for Dump Box
As a result of the significant risk of injury or death to
employees working between the frame and dump box
of a dump truck, one employer developed braces to
secure the dump box while employees serviced areas
on the rear axles, or drive lines, and repaired the air
cylinders for the tailgates that was not reachable using
the manufacturer’s prop. Three tests were conducted
on one prototype brace at the Structures and
Materials Testing Laboratory at the University of
Wisconsin - Madison using a 1-million pound test
machine calibrated to National Institute of Standards
and Technology (NIST) traceable standards. Loads
were applied to the brackets at the rate of 10,000
lbs./min. The braces successfully passed the test.
The following is an example of the prototype truck
bed brace brackets (see Figures 5, 6 and 7) that were
developed by the employer and can be used
universally on any brand of dump box. The standard
flange is 3.5 inches and the braces will fit up to a 4.5
inch channel. In addition, these braces have a handle
that allows the employee to place the brace under the
dump box without creating an additional hazard. The
employee must rest the brace on the frame of the
truck while standing next to the tires.
Figure 5. Engineered truck bed brace brackets.
For problems with accessibility in using figures and illustrations in this document, please contact the Directorate of Science, Technology and Medicine at (202) 693-2300.
Figure 6. Truck bed brace bracket (bottom channel).
For problems with accessibility in using figures and illustrations in this document, please contact the Directorate of Science, Technology and Medicine at (202) 693-2300.
Figure 7.Truck bed brace bracket (top channel supporting dump body.)
For problems with accessibility in using figures and illustrations in this document, please contact the Directorate of Science, Technology and Medicine at (202) 693-2300.
Conclusions
Manufacturers of dump trucks provide body props or
braces as standard equipment but they are nonadjustable.
If a higher angle is needed to access the
rear of the truck, the manufacturer-provided standard
prop can not be used when performing some of the
service functions safely. The employer needs to
specifically address the hazards of this condition and
how to protect employees from these hazards. This
SHIB raises awareness that the manufacturer’s
standard body prop or support may not be adequate
to perform certain jobs safely. The employer should
determine whether the manufacturer can provide an
alternative body prop that would raise the dump truck bed sufficiently to allow safe access for repairs or
maintenance at the rear of the truck or otherwise
ensure that the truck body is positively restrained from
unexpected movement. Therefore, OSHA
recommends that employers contact the manufacturer
to determine if alternative body props are available, or
to discuss other suitable methods to support the truck
bed if the standard procedures are not possible.
The following actions can protect employees from the
hazards faced when working under a raised dump
truck dump body:
- Ensure that elevated parts of heavy
equipment are suitably supported from
unexpected movement while being serviced.
OSHA’s construction standard,
29 CFR
1926.600(a)(3)(i), requires that: “heavy
machinery, equipment, or parts thereof which
are suspended or held aloft... shall be
substantially blocked or cribbed to prevent
falling or shifting before employees are
permitted to work under or between them.
- Train employees on the hazards associated
with working around functioning or
malfunctioning dump body systems.
OSHA’s construction standard,
29 CFR
1926.21(b)(2), requires that “the employer
shall instruct each employee in the recognition
and avoidance of unsafe conditions...”
- Contact the original equipment
manufacturer to discuss an
alternative body prop or other suitable
methods to perform maintenance or
repair work.
- Engineer safeguard mechanisms/systems such
as a “truck bed brace bracket” that will
enable a device to be positioned in any fixed
position to eliminate or prevent employee
exposure to hazardous conditions
while maintaining or servicing such equipment.
OSHA’s general industry standard,
29 CFR
1910.147(c)(1), requires employers to “establish a
program consisting of energy control procedures,
employee training and periodic inspections to ensure
that before any employee performs any servicing or
maintenance on a machine or equipment
where the...release of stored energy could
occur and cause injury, the machine or
equipment shall be isolated from the energy
source and rendered inoperative.”
Additionally, in general industry settings, OSHA’s
standard,
29 CFR 1910.147(c)(7)(i), requires
employers to “provide training to ensure that the
purpose and function of the energy control program
are understood by employees and that the knowledge
and skills required for the safe application, usage, and
removal of the energy controls are acquired by
employees.” Training shall include, but is not limited
to, instruction in controlling hazards of heavy
equipment maintenance, specific procedures, and
appropriate devices.
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and
Health (NIOSH) has also studied the hazards
associated with dump truck maintenance. The
NIOSH Fatality Assessment and Control Evaluation
Program (FACE), conducted investigations to identify
risk factors that contribute to workplace fatalities and
it offers recommended intervention strategies to
prevent future fatal workplace accidents. For
information on FACE investigations related to dump
trucks, see
West Virginia Case Report - 00WV011-01 and
West
Virginia Case Report - 98WV029-01.
For additional information on the prototype truck bed
body prop brace, contact OSHA’s
Madison, Wisconsin area office at (608) 441-5388.
For information on the ISO standard that provides the
performance criteria for truck bed supports, refer to
ISO 13333:1994 Earth-moving machinery-Dumper
body support and operators cab tilt support devices.
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