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    MIND YOUR SAFETY
by Dave Smith
A lot changes in 30 years
Where do you Stand on the Left-Hand Rule
And then the lights went out
Hard hats and jerking knees....again
Listening Alone is Not Learning
Check Applicable Up-to-Date Drawings
Heads up and hats off with foam inserts
Know your responsibility before you cross-train
Open Season on Pranksters
Shush! People are trying to not get themselves killed
The application of safety grounds
Avoid future extraordinary losses
Bulletproof your safety documentation
Catch the Z462 train... or be crushed by it
CSA Z462 puts the squeeze on small electrical contractors
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High Voltage Maintenance
Edmonton, AB
Sep 13, 2010 - Sep 17, 2010


Arc Flash & Low Voltage Safety
Edmonton, AB
Sep 14, 2010 - Sep 14, 2010


Arc Flash & Low Voltage Safety
Calgary, AB
Sep 15, 2010 - Sep 15, 2010


High Voltage Maintenance
Edmonton, AB
Sep 20, 2010 - Sep 24, 2010


Arc Flash & Low Voltage Safety
Regina, SK
Sep 22, 2010 - Sep 22, 2010


PLC Programming, Maintenance & Troubleshooting: Rockwell 5000 Based PLCs
Calgary, AB
Sep 22, 2010 - Sep 24, 2010


Arc Flash & High Voltage Safety
Regina, SK
Sep 23, 2010 - Sep 24, 2010


High Voltage Maintenance
Saskatoon, SK
Oct 18, 2010 - Oct 22, 2010


PLC Programming, Maintenance & Troubleshooting: Rockwell 500 Based PLCs
Richmond, BC
Oct 19, 2010 - Oct 22, 2010


Arc Flash & Low Voltage Safety
Grande Prairie, AB
Oct 19, 2010 - Oct 19, 2010


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    MIND YOUR SAFETY by Dave Smith

The “Rule of Rules”

As a rule, it seems, people like to make rules, then insist that their rules are the correct rules. Specifically, I’m talking about the “Left Hand Rule”. For years, disconnect handles were located on the right-hand side of switches while the hinges were on the left. So, we learned early to grab the handle with our left hand, position our body way off to the right of the switch, look away, hold our breath and close our eyes before very decisively moving the handle On or Off. This is the essence of the “Left Hand Rule”.

Several years ago, while teaching an electrical cross-training course to a group of instrument technologists, a student told me the “Left Hand Rule” had changed. You weren’t supposed to stand on the right side of the equipment, the student explained, but rather to the left, where you reach across the switch and operate the handle very decisively with your right hand.

I was stunned, because this “Right Hand Rule” puts your right arm (as well as a good chunk of your body) in close contact with the switch. (The rationale is that, should the switch blow up, the blown door will shield you from the flash.) When I heard this, I immediately went to our instructor group to find out whether they’ve heard the same thing. They were also amazed and, as a group, we completely disagree with this notion.

But this “Right Hand Rule” is still floating around out there. I just completed a class where the electricians told me they’ve had one manufacturer instruct them the old way, and another the new way.

It is important to differentiate between facts and opinions masquerading as facts. Fact: the traditional switching method puts our bodies out of the blast path. I have talked to a number of electrical workers over the years who have had doors blow open and none of them had been burned. I know of two workers, though, who broke bones in their hands and arms because they were in the way of doors being violently blown open.

Remember, there’s a ton of electrical ‘horsepower’ behind that door, just waiting to kick it open in your face. Many of us have seen the results of electrical explosions that have ripped metal doors right off their hinges when those ‘horses’ got their chance.

There are nine electrical instructors in our group with over 300 years of combined experience. We are grey, balding, wrinkled and weathered... and we’ve all been kicked. We don’t know everything, but here’s our two cents: stay to the handle side when the hinges are opposite the handle; when the hinges and handle are on the same side, then stay on the hinge side. For doors that have an operating handle in the middle, stay on the hinge side. In all cases, make sure you’re wearing your PPE!

If anyone reading this has bona fide evidence to the contrary, let me know and I’ll be the first to change my beliefs as well as my body positioning. Meantime, reaching fully across the front of any type of switch is just someone’s opinion—an opinion that could take your arm. It’s your body and your life, so plan your positioning carefully.

Until next time, be ready, be careful and be safe.

Mind Your Safety is a monthly column authored by Dave Smith of Canada Training Group for Electrical Business magazine. Reprinting of this article is allowed for the intent of furthering safety awareness, with the requirement that articles(s) are used in their entirety and authorship is duly credited to Dave Smith, Canada Training Group and Electrical Business magazine.

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