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WORKING AT HEIGHT A TALL ORDER


Businesses whose employees routinely work at height appreciate that to comply they must use appropriate access equipment, yet those undertaking only occasional or seasonal activities may be unclear about their responsibilities,


Allan Parsons, National Rental Manager at Briggs Equipment offers tips to help businesses hire the most appropriate machines.


More stringent health and safety legislation is driving increased use of access equipment, and it's a welcome development because the number of serious injuries due to people falling from a height is on the decline.


Our aim is to help businesses that are less familiar with the hire process take into consideration the weather, ground conditions and site access - all of which can impact on performance and safety - so that they hire the right machines and their employees stay out of harm's way.


Access equipment can be easier to use and more cost- effective than scaffold towers, which have to be erected before work can start and dismantled once the job is finished. Boom and scissor lifts can go into service as soon as they arrive on site and can be off-hired upon completion of the activity.


Here are Briggs Equipment's top tips to hire in the right Mobile Elevating Work Platform, (MEWP) for the job:


EQUIPMENT CHOICE Scissor lifts are ideally suited to applications where there is a requirement to raise workers vertically to a given height.


In all instances the total weight carried on the platform, including operatives, tools and materials must not exceed the specified maximum load.


Cherry pickers are appropriate where jobs that involve reaching out at an angle as well as up. Operators are advised to wear a safety harness because of the machine's bouncing action during lifting, stock pickers allow one person to ascend to 12ft vertically and are widely used in retail and warehousing environments.


Straight masted boom lifts travel vertically and then horizontally so are ideal for environments that involve working over the top of steelwork or tree branches.


TALK IT THROUGH WITH EXPERTS If you don't know the ropes, seek expert advice. This way, you get the right MEWP for the application and neither the safety of the operator nor the work environment is compromised. The hire industry uses American sizing, so a 19/30 scissor lift has the capacity to lift to 19ft and features a 30-inch wide bed. Ask for advice to avoid confusion over dimensions.


SIZE IS EVERYTHING MEWPs are quite small - some can even pass through a standard warehouse doorway - so it is easy to overlook site access. Make sure that the transporter can reach the drop- off point and check that the machine can be moved to the specific work environment.


If you are working indoors on a flat surface, a scissor lift can carry two people to height, but for outdoor jobs it is safe for only one person to ascend. The equipment's small wheels will not cope with gravel or muddy ground conditions and strong winds may destabilise the platform. Stock pickers can only be used indoors, but boom lifts have an oscillating axle so are suited to working outside on uneven and sloping ground.


Scissor lifts are electrically powered so for outside jobs it makes sense to have an extra battery to hand or to choose a biofuel machine. When the battery is low, scissor lifts with a built-in generator automatically switch to running on diesel, simultaneously charging the battery.


MEWPs are increasingly commonplace wherever there is a need to work off the ground. To ensure safe working at height, Briggs' advice is be clear about what you are lifting, hire in quality equipment suited to the application and make sure machines are used by trained operators.


www.briggsequipment.co.uk 18 www.tomorrowshs.com


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