Work Area Design - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Work Area Design

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... tools, containers, and materials: 100-150 mm below elbow. If effortful work: 150-400 mm below elbow ... Work height: elbow height. Adjustable from 600-700 mm ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Learn more at: http://cecs.wright.edu
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Title: Work Area Design


1
Work Area Design
  • Definition the design of the work area to
    accommodate workers while maximizing human
    effectiveness
  • General Requirements
  • Functional requirements
  • Visibility
  • Displays, controls
  • Present data at right angle to line of sight to
    minimize visual parallax
  • Hearing requirements
  • Buzzers
  • Alarms
  • Consider clearances
  • Access
  • Egress
  • Comfort and support for grasping and operating
    equipment/controls (e.g., tennis racket)
  • Reach and manipulation
  • Normal (convenient sweep of arm) vs. maximum area
    (extending arm from shoulder)

2
Work Area Design
  • General Principles
  • Population stereotypes
  • Operator expectancies ensure they are not
    violated
  • Psychosocial factors
  • Cleanly and orderliness of work setting
  • Environmental factors
  • Heat
  • Humidity
  • Noise
  • Standardization
  • Savings in training time
  • Design for the total system
  • Design for maintainability
  • Allow various work postures
  • Sitting, standing

3
Workstation Design
  • Key is adjustability
  • Adjustability is a key element of design
    adjusting to the user, task allow you to obtain a
    good fit between the user and task
  • Key usability will depend on the operators
    perception of resulting benefits
  • Adjustability approaches
  • Workplace adjustments
  • Cutouts can be used to minimize reach
    requirements and protrusion of chairs into aisles

vs.
4
Workstation Design
  • Adjustability approaches
  • Work surface height and inclination

Angle of inclination
Height
5
Workstation Design
  • Adjustability approaches
  • Worker position
  • Seat height
  • Chairs with rollers for horizonital adjustment
  • Platforms help change position in relation to
    work surface
  • Footrests resolve unsupported legs must be
    adjustable to seat height
  • Work piece and tool adjustment
  • Adjust work piece via clamps, vises, jigs
  • Gravity bins to bring parts to within reach
    reduce search time
  • Lift tables
  • Work posture
  • Seating issues visibility, clearances, less
    fatigue due to improved blood circulation,
    reduced static loads
  • Standing experience greater physiological load,
    standing still for long periods leads to blood
    and body fluid accumulation in legs
  • Swelling, varicose veins

6
Workstation Design
  • Based on anthropometric data, behavioral
    patterns of people, and specific work
    requirements
  • Standards often arbitrary, unpractical
  • Developed by committees involving many parties
  • Can be politically motivated
  • Working heights
  • Must fit stature and type of work
  • Too high shoulder lifted, pain in the neck and
    shoulders
  • Too lowback hunched, backache
  • Standing handwork
  • 50-100 mm below elbow
  • Delicate 50-100 mm above elbow height, support
    elbows
  • Manual work with tools, containers, and
    materials 100-150 mm below elbow
  • If effortful work 150-400 mm below elbow

7
Workstation Design
  • Working heights
  • How to accommodate different statures?
  • Foot supports
  • Raise table
  • Fully adjustable bench
  • If cant adjust, accommodate tallest and provide
    platform
  • Work heights for sedentary work
  • Elbow height is general rule of thumb
  • Fine precision work above elbow
  • Forceful or large motion below elbow height
  • Conflict with providing adequate knee room
  • Measured from floor to top of seated knee
  • Considerations
  • tile to accommodate
  • Amount of clearance
  • Table thickness
  • Distance from seat surface to table underside

8
Workstation Design
  • Work heights for sedentary work (cont)
  • Office work
  • lt 50 have upright posture
  • Common musculoskeletal complaints ( of 246
    office workers surveyed)
  • 57 back
  • 29 knee and feet (short people)
  • 24 neck and shoulders (desk heigh)
  • General recommendations
  • Desk height 740-780 mm
  • Given seat adjustability and a foot rest
  • Seat below desk 270-300 mm
  • Regardless of stature
  • Natural trunk posture

9
Workstation Design
  • Work heights for sedentary work (cont)
  • General recommendations (cont)
  • Compensate for high work level
  • Lift shoulders (trapezius)
  • Adduct arm (deltoids)
  • Easier to accommodate tallest (desk height)
  • Leg room
  • General rule of thumb cross legs without
    difficulty
  • No drawers above legs
  • No thick edge to desk
  • Table thickness ? 30 mm
  • Leg space 680 mm wide by 690 mm high
  • Depth for stretching
  • Knee 600 mm
  • Foot 800 mm
  • Keyboard tables
  • Working height is middle row of keys
  • Work height elbow height
  • Adjustable from 600-700 mm

10
Workstation Design
  • Sit/Stand workstations
  • Recommended physiologically and orthopaedically
  • Alternates stressed and relaxed muscles
  • Varies supplies of nutrients to the disc
  • Special considerations
  • Horizontal knee room
  • Height of work area from seat and floor
  • Seat adjustablility
  • Tilted tables
  • Research comparing flat, 12 degree and 24 degree
  • Tilt had more erect posture
  • Tilt less electrical activity
  • Tilt subjectively preferred
  • Tilt for reading
  • Flat for writing
  • Tradeoff of visual postural advantages vs. ease
    of use

11
Workstation design
  • Neck and head posture
  • Hard to define since 7 joints
  • Estimate line along neck relative to verticle,
    horizontal, trunk
  • Ear-eye line (EEL) line from earhole to eyelid
  • Used to describe posture
  • Used to reference line of sight
  • Approximately 15 degree (to vertical) ok
  • Chaffin as angle increase, quicker to fatigue
  • Should not be greater than 30 degrees for any
    time
  • Line of sight
  • Represented by line from pupil to visual target
  • If head upright
  • Distant targets along horizonital with eye
  • Closer target more declined
  • Reading 45 degrees below EEL
  • General rule preferred line of sight 10-15
    degrees below horizontal
  • Defines regular viewing cone of 30 degrees around
    preferred line of sight (15 degrees above, 15
    degrees below
  • EEL should be less than or equal to 15 degrees
    relative to horizon
  • Results apply to VDT work also

12
Workstation design
  • Room to Grasp and Reach (see overheads)
  • Grasp/Reach envelope sweep radius of arms with
    hand in grasping or reaching posture
  • Location of shoulder joint
  • 5th ile measurements
  • Vertical Grasp verticle plane in which you can
    take hold of things and move them around
  • Based on shoulder height of 5th ile (closed
    hand arm length)
  • Can occasionally extend by stretching shoulder,
    feet, and legs
  • Horizontal Grasp-horizontal plane in which you
    can take a hold of things and move over table top
  • Reach Height vertical height reached with
    extended hand
  • Shelves, storage (consider shelf depth)
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