Radio controlled forklift8/31/2023 ![]() ![]() Google Patents US20090303035A1 - Radio controlled safety stop system for forklift trucks with rfid If the operator is so bored with the job that (s)he needs a radio, I think it's time to pull the operator off the truck.US20090303035A1 - Radio controlled safety stop system for forklift trucks with rfid I feel that the use of a radio on a forklift is a major distraction from a job that requires full and constant operator attention to the task at hand. Management and employees must be made aware that Walkmen type devices do pose a hazard to hearing if they are played too loud for any significant length of time whether on or off the job: The energy, not the esthetics, of sound poses the threat to human hearing sensitivity." Use of Walkmen in occupational noise less than Tables G-16 or D-1 is at managerial discretion unless its use causes a serious safety hazard to warrant issuance of a 5(a)(1). Use of Walkmen over required ear protection is a violation. ![]() Use of walkmen in noise environments in excess of Tables G-16 and D-1 is a violation. ![]() In summary the following compliance direction can be put forward. Such devices are in compliance with OSHA regulations if they meet the attenuation requirements relative to the workplace noise levels and their average music output is less than 90 dBA. The United States Postal Service has developed special ear muffs equipped with volume-limited music for use in monotonous high noise jobs to protect employee hearing but at the same time allowing them to enjoy background music. Therefore, listening to a Walkman unit at more than 50% to 75% rated output will generate sound levels in excess of the OSHA PEL creating a threat to the wearer's hearing and this may also produce a safety hazard by masking environmental sounds that need to be heard. Most of the commercially-available headsets for Walkmen will produce 100 to 103 dB SPL for an output voltage of 1 mV. The industrial hygiene department of GM found typical headset output levels of 99 to 100 dBA in auto workers with a maximum exposure level of 117 dBA. In a North Carolina textile mill where the TWA was 87 dBA NCSU researchers found the median Walkman level to be 84 dBA with 20% of the workers listening at 90 dBA or greater. The typical commercial Walkman headset provided the following A-weighted decibel levels for these volume settings: 64 dBA/25%, 81 dBA/50%, 91 dBA/75%, and 96 dBA/100%. The NCSU study also found the following facts. This obviates the effectiveness of the ear protection and is a violation of the noise standard. If Walkman headsets are worn over otherwise effective ear protection, then the unit's volume control has to be adjusted to exceed the hearing protector's field attenuation. Therefore, such headsets afford no ear protection. The NRR varied from a low of 0.3 dB to a high of 2.6 dB with an average NRR of 1 dB. Twenty different Walkman type headsets were evaluated for noise attenuation at North Carolina State University (NCSU). John Barry who presents the following information: "Your technical request has been reviewed by Dr. The interpretation is based on walkman radios but the same results would apply to a fixed radio (especially in an enclosed cab). The following OSHA interpretation is dated but gives insight into OSHA's thinking. (a) Each employer - (1) shall furnish to each of his employees employment and a place of employment which are free from recognized hazards that are causing or are likely to cause death or serious physical harm to his employees The OSHA General Duty Clause, 5(a)(1) addresses the safety hazard. OSHA 1910.95 addresses permissible noise exposure. 1) Does the radio volume exceed the permissible OSHA noise exposure limits (especially in an enclosed cab)? and 2) Does the sound distract the operator from the safe operation of the truck? ![]()
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