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Safety FIRST

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During FIRST Robotics. Manufacture, Assembly, Test & Operation. Greg Kirksey, OSHA ... Horseplay during construction, manufacturing, shipping, field trip, competition ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Safety FIRST


1
Safety FIRST
During FIRST Robotics Manufacture, Assembly, Test Operation Greg Kirksey, OSHA General Industry Outreach Trainer Scot Marshall, Lockheed Martin Space Systems, Team 1913
2
Overview Signage Prevention Training Personal
Protective Equipment (PPE) Anatomy of Accidents
Hazard Analysis Safeguards Team
Safety Transportation Abuse
3
Examples of Safety Signs
4
General Safety
  • Comply with final inspection requirements as soon
    as possible to prevent accidents
  • Arena Safety/Operation
  • Essential personnel only
  • Stay behind barriers
  • Enter when authorized
  • Energize when approved
  • Pit Safety Not just at competition
  • Eye and foot protection at a minimum
  • Assume you are at risk
  • Scan for hazards
  • Chemical Safety
  • Material Safety Data Sheets (MSDS)

5
Prevention Overview
System components must be designed, installed,
and secured so that the hazards associated with
stored energy are minimized. Adequate room must
be provided for a robot's movement as well as for
workers. There must be a means for controlling
the release of stored energy in all the robotic
systems and for shutting off power from outside
the restricted envelope. A detailed risk
assessment should be performed to ensure the
safety of workers who operate, service and
maintain the robotics system.
6
Control Prevention
  • Eliminate EXPOSURE to the hazard if at all
    possible
  • If there is NO EXPOSURE there is NO RISK of
    injury
  • Minimize the hazard if it cant be eliminated
  • Restrict Access to necessary personnel
  • Train/Educate those at risk
  • Personnel who program, operate, maintain, or
    repair robots or robot systems should receive
    adequate safety training and be able to
    demonstrate competency in performing their jobs
    safely.
  • Protect against the damage or injury
  • Personnel Protective Equipment (PPE)
  • Barriers and Safeguards

7
Hazards when Powered OFF
  • When the tool is OFF is it Safe?
  • Not necessarily
  • Stored Energy
  • Potential Energy
  • Sharp points and edges
  • How do you know if it is Safe?
  • Only if you know all the tools systems and
    hazards
  • Learn what components can store energy
  • Learn how energy can be released
  • Learn the hazards associated with each tool
  • LEARN HOW TO OPERATE EACH TOOL BEFORE YOU USE IT

8
Training
  • Safety training is necessary for new operators,
    new or altered safeguards, or new machines or
    operation
  • Provide instruction or hands-on training in the
    following
  • Describe and identify the hazards associated with
    each machine
  • The safeguards themselves, how they provide
    protection, and the hazards for which they are
    intended
  • How to use the safeguards and why
  • How and under what circumstances safeguards can
    be removed, and by whom (Remove an repair by
    qualified technician when safeguards are damaged,
    return to svc.)
  • What to do and what action to take if a safety
    incident occurs

9
Typical Personal Protective Equipment (PPE)
  • Hand
  • Gloves
  • Face
  • Face Shield
  • Eye
  • Glasses, Goggles
  • Ear
  • Ear Plugs, Ear Muffs
  • Lung
  • Mask, Respirator
  • Head
  • Hard Hat

10
Not Just PPE
  • No Loose Clothing
  • Unnecessary risk around moving or rotating
    machinery
  • Tripping Hazard
  • Can catch on nearby equipment
  • Lift properly to avoid injury
  • Head Up, Straight Back, Bend at Hips
  • Load close to body and directly in front
  • Lift with Legs, shift feet to turn, elbows in

11
Before PPE Selection Survey the Site
  • Conduct a walk-through to identify sources of
    hazards to workers and co-workers from the basic
    hazard categories
  • Impact
  • Penetration
  • Compression (roll-over)
  • Chemical
  • Heat
  • Harmful dust
  • Light (optical) radiation

12
PPE Selection Hazard Sources
  • Motion
  • Machinery or processes where movement of tools,
    machine elements or particles could exist, or
    collision with stationary objects
  • High Temperatures / Chemical Exposures
  • Harmful Dust
  • Light Radiation
  • Welding, brazing, cutting, furnaces, heat
    treating, high intensity lights, etc.
  • Falling objects or potential for dropping objects
  • Sharp objects
  • Rolling or pinching objects which could crush the
    feet
  • Layout of workplace and location of co-workers
  • Electrical hazards
  • Review injury/accident data to help identify
    problem areas

13
Anatomy of Robotic Accidents
  • Lower Incidence During
  • Demonstrated Autonomous Mode
  • Operator Control with an Experienced Operator
  • Higher Incidence During
  • Operator Orientation, Training, and
    Experimentation
  • Programming Program Touchup
  • New Operations
  • Maintenance
  • Adjustment
  • Testing
  • Repair
  • Setup
  • Thats What Youll Be Doing Most!

14
Sources of Hazards
  • Human Errors
  • New/One-time operations (e.g. crating/uncrating)
  • Prior to programming
  • Interfacing activated peripheral equipment
  • Connecting live devices or sensors to the
    microprocessor or a peripheral
  • The greatest problem, however, is overfamiliarity
    with the robot or tool so that an individual
    places himself in a hazardous position.
  • Control Errors
  • Faults within the control system of the robot
  • Errors in software
  • interference - Electromagnetic or Radio frequency
  • Unauthorized Access
  • Entry into a robot's safeguarded area is
    hazardous because the person involved may not be
    familiar with the safeguards in place or their
    activation status.

15
Sources of Hazards
  • Transportation
  • Rough/uneven floor
  • Wheels that are too small for surface
  • Visibility over and around the robot
  • Robot that doesnt fit dolly
  • In a hurry to cue
  • Grade
  • Cueing/Staging
  • Unaware of blocking the way for another team
  • Field behind schedule
  • Roboteers at rest
  • Out-of-Pit Repairs
  • Improper tool or support
  • Inadequate time for attempted repair

16
Sources of Hazards
  • Mechanical Failures
  • Operating programs may not account for cumulative
    mechanical part failure, and faulty or unexpected
    operation may occur.
  • Environmental Sources
  • Electromagnetic or radio-frequency interference
    (transient signals)
  • Power Systems
  • Pneumatic or electrical power sources
  • Electrical shock and release of stored energy
    from accumulating devices
  • Improper Installation
  • The design and layout of equipment, and
    facilities, if inadequately done, can lead to
    inherent hazards.

Transportation
17
Types of Accidents
  • Contact
  • Movement, component malfunction, or program
    changes
  • Crushing, Trapping, Piercing
  • Failure
  • Components
  • Drive System
  • End Effectors
  • Peripheral Equipment
  • Trips, Slips, Falls
  • Restricted Space

18
Risk of Injury or Damage
  • The WORKING ENVELOPE of the machine
  • More than just the robot Any machine or tool
  • Maximum, Restricted, Working
  • Exists when there is energy to be released
  • Changes DIMENSION when the robot MOVES
  • The risk exists to the edge the ENVELOPE

19
Energy Storage and Release
  • Mechanical Energy Storage
  • Compressed Spring
  • Gear
  • Stalled Motor
  • Chain Tension
  • Momentum
  • Electrical Energy Storage
  • Battery, Capacitor
  • Pneumatic Energy Storage
  • Charged Air Cylinders
  • Compressed Air in Lines
  • Potential Energy Storage
  • Extended Appendages
  • Bound Joints
  • Lifted Weights

20
Eliminate the Hazard
  • Release stored energy before power-down
  • Return it to its home position
  • Power the equipment OFF

Safety FIRST
21
Safeguard Requirements
  • Prevent Contact
  • The safeguard must prevent hands, arms, and any
    other part of a worker's body from making contact
    with moving parts.
  • Secure
  • Workers should not be able to easily remove or
    tamper with the safeguard
  • Protect from falling objects
  • The safeguard should ensure that no objects can
    fall into moving parts.
  • Create no new hazards
  • A safeguard defeats its own purpose if it creates
    a hazard of its own.
  • Create no interference
  • Any safeguard which impedes a worker from
    performing the job quickly and comfortably might
    soon be overridden or disregarded.
  • Allow safe maintenance if possible.

22
Safeguards
  • RISK ASSESSMENT. At each stage of development of
    the robot and robot system a risk assessment
    should be performed.
  • SAFEGUARDING DEVICES. Personnel should be
    safeguarded from hazards associated with the
    restricted envelope (space) through the use of
    one or more safeguarding devices
  • Mechanical limiting devices
  • Nonmechanical limiting devices
  • Presence-sensing safeguarding devices
  • Fixed barriers (which prevent contact with moving
    parts)
  • Interlocked barrier guards
  • AWARENESS DEVICES
  • Chain or rope barriers
  • Supporting stanchions or flashing lights
  • Signs, whistles, and horns

23
Moving Part Safeguarding
  • Point of operation
  • That point where work is performed on the
    material, such as cutting, shaping, boring, or
    forming of stock.
  • Power transmission apparatus
  • All components of the mechanical system which
    transmit energy to the part of the machine
    performing the work. These components include
    flywheels, pulleys, belts, connecting rods,
    couplings, cams, spindles, chains, cranks, and
    gears.
  • Other moving parts
  • All parts of the machine which move while the
    machine is working. These can include
    reciprocating, rotating, and transverse moving
    parts, as well as feed mechanisms and auxiliary
    parts of the machine.

24
Team Safety
  • Safety Captain
  • Independent monitor of operations during concept,
    manufacturing process, shipping / receiving,
    field trip, and competition
  • Uninvolved in the proceedings while observing
  • Answers only to Coach Mentors
  • Identifies safety hazards and prevents safety
    incidents
  • Spotters
  • Used during every movement of a tool or equipment
  • Eliminate hazards for the transportation team
  • Ensures clearances, accessibility, coordination
  • Disciplinarian Consequences of Safety
    Infractions
  • Verbal
  • Documentation
  • Cumulative documentation
  • Disciplinary action up to and including
  • Being relieved of you job on the team
  • Exclusion from travel to the regional
  • Dismissal from the team

25
Team Safety Operations Checklist
  • Personnel in working area without Safety Briefing
  • Visitors
  • Nonessential Personnel
  • Authorized and qualified personnel on break
  • Equipment Location
  • Equipment Configuration
  • Improper fixturing of parts
  • Misplaced Tools
  • Damaged Tools
  • Hazardous Situations
  • Eye, Ear, Face, Hand, Body, Foot, Trip,

26
Abuse
  • Abuse and harassment may be emotional, physical,
    or sexual.
  • FIRST now has eligibility procedures for
    volunteer selection, training and supervision for
    FIRST Robotics Competition (FRC) regional events
    and all components of the FIRST Championship
    similar to those being used by many other
    youth-serving organizations.
  • Staff and volunteers at FIRST events are easily
    distinguishable.
  • Participants are expected to be in pairs or
    larger groups at all times going to, coming from,
    and during FIRST events.
  • Volunteers and participants should avoid isolated
    situations where incidents or allegations are
    more likely to occur.
  • Report any suspicions of harassment or abuse
    immediately.
  • FIRST will follow up on all reports, and will
    take appropriate action.

27
Safety During Transportation
  • Transportation-related risks for drivers,
    vehicles, and passengers
  • Drivers of vehicles should be properly licensed,
    insured, be adequately trained to drive the kind
    of vehicle used.
  • Drive prudently and not be under the influence of
    alcohol or drugs.
  • Vehicles should be in good condition, and have
    required safety equipment, insurance, and
    inspections, and not be overloaded.
  • Passengers should act safely, refrain from
    distracting the driver, and take proper safety
    precautions (i.e., use seat belts in vehicles so
    equipped).

28
Remember Safety FIRST
FIRST asks everyone involved in FIRSTs programs
to place the highest priority on safety, looking
out not only for ones own safety but also the
safety of others. Do not hesitate to speak up or
act in the interest of safety. FIRST particularly
wants to highlight safety measures in the areas
of transportation, equipment and work safety, and
guarding against abuse.
http//www.osha.gov/SLTC/robotics/solutions.html
29
Safety Captains Job
  • My job is to make sure every teammate goes home
    from the FIRST Robotics work in the same
    condition as when they came to it!

30
Back-up Charts
31
Team Safety Discipline Consequences
  • All students wishing to be a part of FIRST
    ROBOTICS competition must avoid receiving 10 or
    more checks on the following check list
  • Students that collect 10 checks or more will not
    be able to go to the Regional and will lose all
    possible recognition for participation.
  • Checks 1 thru 9 can result in lost of
    participation at the Regional and or
    Championship. In some cases, careless action
    while on school grounds and field trip activities
    may invoke school administrative discipline.
  • First offense - Verbal warning with check box on
    check list circled
  • Two (2) or more circled check points will be
    considered a check for each.
  • Second offense - Check made in check box
  • Third offense Additional checks, invoke appeal
    process, consequences
  • Students are either returned to team assignment,
    reassigned, placed on suspension, or dismissed
    from the team.
  • Academic Probation, failing a class, school
    suspension or expulsion are considered severe and
    may result in immediate expulsion from FIRST
    ROBOTICS
  • Court of Appeals Teacher / Mentors. Students
    will have a right to explain their complaints or
    differences.

32
Team Safety Discipline Checklist
  • Horseplay during construction, manufacturing,
    shipping, field trip, competition
  • Disregard for posted signs and set safety rules
    in place
  • Lack of Gracious Professionalism or respect
    among fellow students and mentors
  • Operating tools or equipment unsafely
  • Careless handling or a hazard to self or others
  • Abuse or playing with equipment or tools
  • Irresponsible to team duties or no participation
    in work activity
  • Disrespect of rules set forth by Team Captain,
    Safety Captain, Mentors, or Coaches
  • Theft of school, robot, or team members property
  • Absent, late, or unexcused early departure from
    Robotics program activity
  • Failing a class, academic probation, suspension
    or expulsion

33
Training Project
  1. Have Students create their own version of Robotic
    Safety
  2. Use the following slide to get students involved
    with making safety signage
  3. Discuss what causes accidents between man and
    machines
  4. With Coaches, Mentors and Team members.

You can make your own Safety Sign
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