OFR-15-74 Standardization Of Controls For Underground Electric Face Equipment - Section 1. Introduction - Background

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
William G. Hedling
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
289
File Size:
73420 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1974

Abstract

The operation of electric face equipment in underground coal mines has proven to be extremely hazardous to mining personnel, including equipment operators and others working in the vicinity of active equipment. Recent industrial engineering studies* of accidents and fatalities indicate that a major contributor to this hazardous situation is noncompliance with modern principles of human engineering, particularly lack of standardization of control configurations. Control configurations differ not only among different machine types, but also among the same machine types produced by different manufacturers. This lack of standardization can produce a high incidence of error in the operation of electric face equipment, thus creating a potential source of accidents. Other examples of non-compliance with human engineering principles are the widespread use of identical black, round control knobs (regardless of the function being performed), and the inappropriate location, spacing, and labeling of controls. Any or all of these factors may place the operator in a "negative transfer" situation, which means that control manipulations appropriate for one type of machine are different from (or even the reverse of) the control movements required to produce the same effect on other machine types. This situation increases the accident potential to the operator, as well as to others in the vicinity. Accident potential is further increased by circumstances which do not allow for large error tolerance-specifically, emergency procedures. Reports of accident statistics cite operator inexperience as a primary cause of most accidents involving underground electric face equipment. Several factors contribute to operator inexperience, including: 1. High personnel turnover 2. Employee absenteeism 3. Current union practice of bidding for jobs.
Citation

APA: William G. Hedling  (1974)  OFR-15-74 Standardization Of Controls For Underground Electric Face Equipment - Section 1. Introduction - Background

MLA: William G. Hedling OFR-15-74 Standardization Of Controls For Underground Electric Face Equipment - Section 1. Introduction - Background. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1974.

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