Technical Paper 306 - Operation and Maintenance of Electrical Equipment Approved for Permissibility by the Bureau of Mines

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
L. C. IlsLey
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
27
File Size:
950 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1922

Abstract

Briefly, a permissible schedule of the Bureau of Mines establishes certain minimum standards for safety; it gives details of test methods adopted to determine whether these standards have been met, and a list of charges for such tests. Any manufacturer has the privilege of submitting his product for test in accordance with the conditions outlined in the schedules. His action is wholly voluntary, for the Federal Government has no jurisdiction as to what equipment shall be used in mines, this authority being left to the various States. When the product of a manufacturer has met the schedule requirements, he is permit¬ted to advertise this fact and to attach an approval plate with the bureau's seal to each machine he makes that is identical in every way with the equipment tested, inspected, and approved by the bureau. This work of approval has grown by the addition of new schedules until at present a great many mines are using one or more classes of permissible equipment, and there is still a demand for other approved apparatus in the ever-widening field of electrically operated machinery. The safety of electrical equipment of this type depends on four fundamentals, namely, (1) correct principles of design; (2) proper assembly of parts at the factory; (3) proper assembly and installation of equipment at the mine; (4) and proper operation and maintenance after installation. The first two factors are within the province of the manufacturer. The bureau either inspects and tests several models of one product, such as electric cap lamps, or one model, such as an electric motor. If this series of tests proves satisfactory, the manufacturer is given the privilege of making other appliances, and assembling them in the same way; the approval plate he attaches is his guaranty that the equipment is identical with the one tested and inspected by the bureau. The third and fourth factors concern those who use such permissible equipment, and it is to them that this paper is mainly addressed, in an effort
Citation

APA: L. C. IlsLey  (1922)  Technical Paper 306 - Operation and Maintenance of Electrical Equipment Approved for Permissibility by the Bureau of Mines

MLA: L. C. IlsLey Technical Paper 306 - Operation and Maintenance of Electrical Equipment Approved for Permissibility by the Bureau of Mines. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1922.

Export
Purchase this Article for $25.00

Create a Guest account to purchase this file
- or -
Log in to your existing Guest account