As part of my role with Safety MITS, I often get the opportunity to visit many industrial and mining companies in the Hunter region, as well as other parts of Australia.
These are mostly very successful companies who pronounce the value of their employees, however what I see behind the scenes of many of these companies shocks me, and other safety conscious people.
Instead of using fit-for-purpose cribbing or blocking for supporting heavy loads, I see companies still putting their workers at risk by using inefficient and dangerous random pieces of timber.
Timber is not a support tool.
While dunnage and blocks made of timber have traditionally been used for blocking and cribbing in industrial applications, these products are not engineered as fit-for-purpose tools for supporting machinery and equipment when carrying out assembly, repairs and maintenance tasks.
Only quality manufactured cribbing blocks and specially designed metal stands can be recognised as purpose-built tools for stabilising heavy equipment.
The difficulty when using timber as a support device is that you don’t actually know anything about the species or state of the timber. It might be just a piece of pine for all the worker knows.
The structural integrity of timber, or lack of it, often cannot be identified until it is too late.
A block may be perfect the day you buy it, but the danger comes as it ages and gets exposed to certain elements.
Timber in moist conditions will absorb water and become structurally unsound, while timber exposed to excessive heat becomes brittle.
When wood creaks, for example, it is the sound of internal grain ruptures, like splits and cracks, rubbing together. At this stage the damage has already occurred and the creaking sound is a warning.
When the load-bearing effectiveness is compromised, timber can catastrophically fail.
As well, timber in a working environment can be exposed to chemicals, solvents, fuels and other contaminants, so if a worker does get a splinter it might easily be contaminated by a foreign body object, which has the potential to make any injury significantly worse.
There are plastic engineered cribbing blocks available on the market which are far superior to timber.
For example, each of our Dura Crib plastic engineered cribbing blocks possesses a uniform load-bearing capacity across the entire block. This is due to blocks having a specific chemical composition that is constantly repeated, and a quality manufacturing process that ensures all products are the same, plus or minus five per cent.
I do appreciate that industry is slowly recognising the benefits of plastic engineered cribbing blocks, but that process is not fast enough. We still have too many workers being injured or worse in our workplaces needlessly.