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PSC Hand Safety · Industry Focus
Engineer the Hand Out of Hazard™ — Cement, Mining and Port Applications

Hand Safety in Cement,
Mining and Ports

Exposure Mapping for Conveyors, Chutes, Crushers, Heavy Components, Rigging and Bulk Handling

Cement plants, mining operations, and port and logistics facilities create hand exposure through conveyor systems, crushers, chutes, hoppers, bulk material handling, heavy equipment maintenance, rigging, suspended loads, loading and unloading operations, and shutdown and breakdown work. Workers often use their hands to clear, guide, align, pull, push, hold, retrieve, or stabilise material and components in dusty, abrasive, high-load environments where hand injuries occur regularly — not only during unusual events, but during routine tasks performed every shift.

Leading hazard types
Pinch · Crush · Caught-Between · Impact · Cut · Abrasion
Highest exposure areas
Conveyors · Chutes · Crushers · Rigging · Shutdown work
Non-negotiable rule
All conveyor, crusher, and chute work requires LOTO before any intervention
Engineer the Hand Out of Hazard™
Measure Exposure Before Injury Happens™
Where Does the Hand Enter the Hazard?™
Where the Exposure Occurs

Heavy, Abrasive, High-Load —
and No Safe Alternative Provided

Cement plants, mines, and port facilities share a common hand safety problem: heavy, abrasive, and often sharp material and components must be handled, positioned, cleared, and maintained in environments where providing engineered alternatives to hand contact has historically not been a priority. Workers clear jammed material from chutes by hand. They push and pull stuck conveyor trays and belt scrapers by hand. They guide suspended components during crane-assisted maintenance by hand. They thread slings under equipment on the ground. They hold pins and drifts during hammering in breakdown situations.

The frequency of these tasks — and the normalisation of the exposure that comes with frequency — means that the hand injuries which occur are rarely treated as preventable. They are absorbed as a cost of the work. The question this page addresses is: at which specific point does the hand enter the hazard, and what engineered control removes or reduces that entry?

The critical safety point for this sector: no conveyor, crusher, chute, hopper, screen, or rotating equipment intervention can be carried out while equipment is running. All jam clearing, belt work, crusher work, chute interventions, and maintenance tasks require isolation, LOTO confirmation, and site procedure compliance before any manual or tool-assisted contact. Distance tools reduce hand exposure during the task — they do not replace guarding, isolation, or energy control.

The tool keeps the hand away from the hazard during the task. The isolation procedure ensures the hazard is not active when the hand approaches. Both are required.

Core Exposure Tasks in Cement, Mining and Ports
  • Clearing jammed material from chutes, transfer points, and hoppers
  • Belt, roller, pulley, and idler handling during conveyor maintenance
  • Guiding suspended components during crane-assisted maintenance lifts
  • Positioning liners, plates, guards, and frames during shutdowns
  • Pulling and pushing stuck covers, hatches, and access panels
  • Rigging — slings, shackles, hooks, and chains under and around equipment
  • Hammering, pin-driving, and wedge extraction during breakdown recovery
  • Port and quayside cargo positioning and bulk handling
LOTO — The Non-Negotiable Prerequisite

No tool on this page is intended for use on running conveyors, operating crushers, live chutes, or active hoppers. All jam clearing, conveyor maintenance, crusher work, chute intervention, and equipment breakdown recovery must be performed only after isolation, LOTO, and site procedure confirmation. The tool reduces hand exposure during the work within the isolated zone — it does not authorise work on live equipment.

Exposure by Area

Hand Exposure Across Cement,
Mining and Port Operations

Each operational area generates distinct hand exposure. Across all three sectors, the pattern is consistent: high-frequency manual tasks, heavy and abrasive material, and gaps in engineered tool provision that the hand fills by default.

Conveyor Systems
Belt conveyor · Transfer points · Scrapers · Skirting
  • Reaching into transfer point areas to clear jammed and lodged material
  • Handling belt scrapers, skirting boards, and tensioning components during adjustment
  • Positioning idlers, rollers, and pulleys during replacement
  • Clearing spillage from beneath conveyor structure — hands near running belt edges
  • Caught-between — hands near nip points between belt and pulley or roller
  • Pinch — between idler and belt structure during roller replacement
  • Abrasion and cut — from belt edges, sharp material, and worn conveyor components
  • All conveyor interventions — clearing, adjusting, replacing components — must be performed only after full isolation and LOTO confirmation. No exceptions.
Crushers, Chutes and Hoppers
Jaw crusher · Cone crusher · Impact crusher · Transfer chutes
  • Clearing jammed or lodged material from crusher feed zones and discharge chutes
  • Dislodging stuck material from chute walls and transfer points using bars and tools
  • Reaching into hoppers to break bridged material
  • Handling liner plates, wear liners, and chute section components during shutdown
  • Caught-between — hand near crusher jaw or cone during material clearing
  • Crush — from material shifting and falling during clearing operations
  • Impact — from dislodging tools and sudden material movement
  • No crusher, chute, or hopper intervention while equipment is running or material is in motion. Full isolation, LOTO, and site procedure confirmation required before entry.
Heavy Equipment Maintenance
Crane-assisted work · Component replacement · Shutdown
  • Guiding heavy suspended components during crane-assisted placement and removal
  • Positioning liners, wear plates, guards, and frames during shutdown maintenance
  • Handling heavy maintenance components in confined and awkward access positions
  • Hammering, pin-driving, wedge extraction, and chisel work during breakdown recovery
  • Crush — hand between suspended component and structure during crane landing
  • Impact — hand holding pins, chisels, or wedges during hammering
  • Pinch — during component positioning and fitment in tight spaces
  • All crane lifts during maintenance under site lift plan and rigging procedure. All tasks inside equipment housings after LOTO and energy isolation confirmation.
Rigging and Suspended Loads
Slings · Shackles · Crane lifts · Component removal
  • Threading slings under and around heavy equipment, liners, and structural components
  • Guiding suspended loads during crane-assisted maintenance and replacement lifts
  • Holding slings and shackles as loads are lifted from their support positions
  • Directing loads to final landing positions by hand contact with load body
  • Caught-between — hand between sling and load, or between load and structure
  • Crush — during load landing and component set-down
  • Line of fire — from suspended load movement during crane travel
Port and Cargo Handling
Quayside · Bulk cargo · Container operations · Holds
  • Guiding cargo, containers, and bulk equipment during crane-assisted landing on quayside and vessel
  • Positioning hatch covers, cargo guides, and landing pads by hand
  • Handling chains, hooks, slings, and lifting tackles during cargo rigging
  • Manoeuvring heavy components in vessel holds and confined cargo areas
  • Crush — between cargo and deck or quayside structure during landing
  • Line of fire — from crane-suspended cargo during travel and descent
  • Caught-between — hands at sling and load body interface during rigging
Shutdown and Breakdown Recovery
Planned shutdown · Breakdown · Emergency work
  • Driving pins, wedges, and drifts during component removal under time pressure
  • Reaching into confined machine access positions to retrieve or reposition components
  • Pulling and pushing stuck access covers, hatches, and maintenance panels
  • Holding components during crane-assisted reinstallation after repair
  • Impact — hand in striking path during hammering tasks
  • Crush — confined access positions during crane-assisted reinstallation
  • Caught-between — hand inside machinery during component handling
  • Time pressure during breakdowns does not reduce the requirement for isolation and LOTO. All tasks inside equipment require energy isolation confirmation before manual intervention — without exception.
Task-Level Exposure Mapping

Where the Hand Enters
the Hazard — Task by Task

Nine tasks across cement, mining, and port operations mapped to hazard type, hand entry point, and applicable control category.

TaskHazard TypeWhere Hand EntersApplicable Control
Clearing jammed material from chute or transfer point CrushCaught-Between Hand reaches into chute body or transfer point opening to dislodge jammed material; arm inside the chute envelope LOTO and isolation confirmed before any intervention — non-negotiable. Post-isolation: distance tools, chute clearing poles, and extension handles to dislodge material without reaching inside the chute envelope. Magnetic tools for ferrous material or components where surface and suitability permit.
Belt, roller, and idler replacement during conveyor maintenance PinchCaught-BetweenAbrasion Hands positioning idler and roller into conveyor frame; hand between roller and belt structure; hands gripping roller body during installation LOTO and isolation before all belt and roller work. Distance handles and positioning tools for roller and idler alignment in frame. Magnetic tools for ferrous rollers and idlers where surface permits. Abrasion and cut-resistant gloves as residual protection only.
Liner and wear plate positioning during crusher shutdown CrushPinch Hands on liner body guiding position inside crusher chamber during crane-assisted placement; hands between liner and crusher shell LOTO and isolation before all crusher chamber access. Load positioning poles and push/pull tools for liner guidance from outside the crush zone. Magnetic tools (LoadGrab, MultiGrab) for ferrous liners and plates where surface and geometry permit — confirm suitability before use.
Heavy suspended component guidance during maintenance crane lift CrushLine of Fire Hand placed on component body to guide lateral position during crane-assisted descent; hand between component and structure at landing Load positioning poles for final guidance from outside the crush zone. Taglines for swing and directional control during load travel. Magnetic tools for ferrous components where surface condition permits. Workers must not stand in line of fire of suspended loads. All crane lifts under site lift plan and exclusion zone procedure.
Sling threading under heavy equipment for rigging Caught-BetweenCrush Hands underneath equipment body to route sling; hand between sling and equipment base; hand at sling-to-hook connection Equipment must be blocked or chocked to prevent movement before hands go underneath. Safe rigging method, blocking/chocking, lift plan, and mechanical rigging aids are the primary controls. Magnetic tools on ferrous equipment surfaces may support engagement from the side or top — reducing need to reach underneath. Confirm material is ferrous and surface suitable before magnetic tool use.
Hatch cover and access panel opening and positioning PinchCrush Hands gripping hatch cover edge to push open or reposition; hand between cover and frame; hand at hinge and seal interface Push/pull hooks and distance handles for hatch and cover repositioning without edge contact. Magnetic tools for ferrous hatch covers where surface and geometry permit. Cut-resistant gloves as residual protection on sharp cover edges.
Hammering, pin-driving, and wedge extraction during breakdown Impact Hand holds pin, chisel, or wedge while hammering during breakdown or maintenance task; hand in the strike path Fingersavers, pin holders, and chisel-holding tools — primary control. Hand kept entirely clear of strike zone by the holding tool. LOTO and isolation confirmed before all maintenance hammering inside equipment areas. Impact-resistant gloves as residual protection only.
Bulk cargo and quayside load positioning during crane operations CrushLine of Fire Hands on cargo body or container to guide lateral position as crane lowers to deck or quayside landing supports Load positioning poles for final guidance from outside the crush zone. Taglines for directional control during load travel. Workers must not stand in line of fire of suspended cargo. Magnetic tools for ferrous cargo and equipment where surface permits. All crane lifts under site lift plan and exclusion zone procedure.
Ferrous plate, liner, and section retrieval and handling CutPinchAbrasion Hands grip ferrous plate, liner section, or structural component edges to slide, lift, or reposition; hands on sharp cut or worn edges Magnetic tools (LoadGrab MagHead, MultiGrab, MPD20) for pick-up, sliding, and positioning of ferrous plates, liners, and sections without edge contact. Suitability depends on surface condition, scale, dust, coating, and direction of force — confirm before use. Cut and abrasion-resistant gloves as residual protection only.
Task Scenarios

Six Tasks — The Exposure
and the Control

These scenarios reflect tasks observed in Indian cement plants, open-cast and underground mining operations, mineral processing facilities, and port and logistics operations. In each case the current method creates direct hand exposure — and an engineered control can reduce it.

Cement Plant / Mine
Clearing jammed material from transfer chute
Crush · Caught-Between

A transfer chute is blocked with compacted material at the junction between conveyor and receiving hopper. The plant is stopped. A maintenance worker reaches inside the chute to dislodge the blockage — arm and hand inside the chute envelope, directly in the path of any material that shifts suddenly. Even with the conveyor isolated, the mass of material above the blockage can shift if it begins to move. The confined chute geometry provides no room to withdraw quickly if material starts to fall or the blockage clears suddenly.

Control approach: LOTO and isolation confirmed before any intervention — this is the prerequisite, not a choice. Post-isolation: chute clearing poles, distance bars, and extension handles to apply dislodging force from outside the chute envelope without the hand or arm entering the confined chute body. For ferrous material or ferrous chute components where magnetic engagement is suitable, magnetic tools may assist retrieval and dislodging. The worker does not enter the chute. The tool enters the chute.
Conveyor System
Idler and roller replacement on a conveyor frame
Pinch · Caught-Between

During conveyor maintenance, a worn idler is replaced. The replacement idler must be lifted into the conveyor frame and seated in the idler brackets. Workers handle the idler by gripping the shell body — hands between the roller and the frame structure, and between adjacent rollers. The idler is abrasive, heavy relative to its size, and the frame geometry creates persistent pinch exposure during installation. The proximity of the belt structure adds caught-between risk throughout the task, even post-isolation.

Control approach: Full conveyor LOTO and isolation before any roller or idler work. Distance handles and positioning tools to guide the idler into the frame bracket without hand contact between the roller and the frame. Magnetic tools for ferrous idler shells where surface permits — allowing the worker to grip the idler through the tool rather than directly. Abrasion and cut-resistant gloves as residual protection on worn and sharp idler surfaces.
Crusher Shutdown
Liner plate removal and replacement
Crush · Pinch

During a planned crusher shutdown, worn liner plates are replaced inside the crusher chamber. The liner sections are heavy, abrasive, and often irregular in shape from wear. They must be guided into position inside the crusher body and against the shell during crane-assisted placement. Workers apply hands to the liner body to correct position as the crane lowers — hands between the liner and the crusher shell in a confined, heavily worn environment. The combination of confined access, abrasive surfaces, and crane-assisted weight makes this a persistent crush and pinch exposure task.

Control approach: Full crusher LOTO and isolation before any chamber access. Load positioning poles for liner guidance from outside the crush zone. Magnetic tools (LoadGrab MagHead, HSF MultiGrab) for ferrous liner plates where surface and geometry permit — the tool handles the contact with the abrasive worn liner surface, not the hand. Confirm magnetic suitability: heavy scale, abrasion, and surface condition all reduce grip. Abrasion-resistant gloves as residual protection.
Maintenance Crane Lift
Heavy component landing during crane-assisted replacement
Crush · Line of Fire

During plant shutdown maintenance, a heavy replacement component — a drive unit, a gearbox, a large bearing housing — is lifted by plant crane and lowered into its mounting position. The component must land on precise locating features. A maintenance worker guides the component by hand during the final descent — hands between the component and its mounting structure. This is a standard practice at most facilities, performed on every maintenance crane lift. The exposure is present every time the crane descends.

Control approach: Load positioning poles for final guidance from outside the crush zone. Taglines for directional control during crane travel. Magnetic tools for ferrous components where surface and material permit — the tool applies guidance force, the hand remains outside the crush zone. Workers must not stand in the line of fire of a suspended component during crane travel. All crane lifts under site lift plan, rigging procedure, and exclusion zone requirements.
Breakdown Recovery
Pin driving and wedge extraction under time pressure
Impact

During a breakdown in a cement mill or crusher drive, a shaft pin or coupling wedge must be extracted urgently to allow component removal. One worker holds the pin or wedge while another hammers. Time pressure during breakdown events increases the tendency to skip proper tool use — the holding worker grips the pin and the hammer is applied. This pattern repeats across breakdown recoveries in cement, mining, and port maintenance, every time urgent extraction is required. The frequency of breakdowns and the pressure to restore production normalises the impact exposure at the holding hand.

Control approach: LOTO and isolation before work inside drive and equipment areas. Fingersavers, pin holders, and chisel-holding tools — primary control. The holding tool grips the pin or wedge mechanically; the holding hand is outside the strike zone entirely. Time pressure during breakdowns does not reduce the need for the holding tool — it takes seconds to use and eliminates the impact exposure. Impact-resistant gloves as residual protection only.
Port / Quayside
Cargo landing guidance during quayside crane operations
Crush · Line of Fire

During crane-assisted cargo and equipment landing at a port or logistics terminal, workers guide loads onto quayside landing supports by placing hands on the cargo body or container structure during the final crane descent. The load may be several tonnes. Workers apply hand pressure to correct lateral position as the crane lowers — standing in or near the load path. Any unexpected crane movement, load rotation, or sudden descent creates crush exposure at the hand and line-of-fire exposure at the worker's position.

Control approach: Load positioning poles for final guidance from outside the crush zone and load path. Taglines for directional control during crane travel. Magnetic tools for ferrous cargo and equipment where surface permits. Workers must not stand in the line of fire of a suspended or descending load. All crane lifts under site lift plan, rigging procedure, and exclusion zone requirements. The control is the tool — not a different body position.
Control Categories

Engineered Controls for
Cement, Mining and Port Tasks

Control selection follows task assessment — the hazard type, the entry point, and the specific material conditions. In dusty, abrasive, high-load environments, tool selection must account for surface condition, contamination, and the physical demands of the task.

Before Any Tool Is Selected — Isolation and LOTO First

No tool on this page is for use on running or energised equipment. All conveyor, crusher, chute, hopper, screen, rotating equipment, and bulk handling interventions require isolation, LOTO, and site procedure confirmation before any manual contact or tool-assisted work begins. Distance tools reduce hand exposure within the isolated work area — they do not replace guarding, isolation, or energy control.

01 · Control Category
Distance Tools, Chute Clearing Poles, and Extension Handles

For chute clearing, material dislodging, cover and hatch repositioning, and component handling in confined access positions — where direct hand contact creates crush, caught-between, or abrasion exposure. Distance tools keep the hand outside the confined or hazardous zone while applying the required force through the tool shaft. Post-isolation: the tool enters the confined space; the hand does not.

Applicable to
Chute and transfer point clearing (post-LOTO) · Hopper bridging material dislodging (post-LOTO) · Hatch cover and access panel repositioning · Component retrieval from confined machine areas · Any task where hand entry into a confined or enclosed area creates exposure
02 · Control Category
Push/Pull Tools and Load Positioning Poles

For guiding, positioning, and directing heavy components, liners, plates, cargo, and equipment during crane-assisted maintenance and handling operations. Push/pull tools and load positioning poles apply directional force from outside the crush zone and line-of-fire path — the tool contacts the load surface, not the hand. Used during the final positioning phase once the load is over its landing position and under controlled crane descent.

Applicable to
Heavy component guidance during maintenance crane lifts · Liner and wear plate positioning in crusher and mill shutdowns · Cargo and equipment landing at port and quayside · Hatch cover, guard, and access panel positioning · Component and fixture alignment during reinstallation
03 · Control Category
Magnetic Tools — Ferrous Components and Plates

Where components, plates, liners, idlers, rollers, or structural sections are ferrous steel, magnetic tools (HSF LoadGrab MagHead, HSF MultiGrab, MPD20, RiggerLock™) allow pick-up, retrieval, sliding, positioning, and guidance without direct hand contact at the sharp, abrasive, or dusty surface.

Suitability in cement, mining, and port environments must be confirmed before each use. Scale, dust, abrasion wear, coating, oil, and surface condition all reduce magnetic grip. Heavily worn, scaled, or contaminated surfaces may not provide reliable magnetic engagement. Confirm surface is ferrous and suitability is adequate before specifying. Send surface photos to PSC Hand Safety where confirmation is needed.

Applicable where ferrous and suitable
Ferrous liner and wear plate handling (post-LOTO) · Ferrous idler and roller positioning on conveyor frames (post-LOTO) · Ferrous component retrieval in crusher and mill areas · Ferrous structural section and plate handling in port and fabrication areas · Subject to surface condition and suitability assessment in each application
04 · Control Category
Taglines and Load-Control Lines

For swing and directional control of suspended components and cargo during crane travel. Taglines keep workers outside the load's swing path during the travel phase — this is distinct from the final positioning phase. Both taglines and positioning tools may be required on the same lift: taglines during travel, positioning poles at the landing point. All tagline use within the site lift plan and rigging procedure requirements.

Applicable to
Heavy maintenance component lifts during plant shutdowns · Bulk cargo and equipment lifts at ports and quaysides · Crane-assisted liner and wear part replacement in crushers and mills · Any crane lift where suspended load swing creates line-of-fire exposure
05 · Control Category
Fingersavers, Pin Holders, and Chisel-Holding Tools

For all hammering, pin-driving, wedge extraction, and chisel work during maintenance, shutdown, and breakdown recovery. Fingersavers and pin-holding tools grip the driven component mechanically — the worker's hand is kept entirely clear of the hammer strike zone by the tool. This is the primary control for impact exposure at all struck-tool tasks across cement, mining, and port maintenance. Time pressure during breakdowns does not reduce this requirement.

Impact-resistant gloves are residual protection only — they reduce the severity of contact if it occurs; they do not prevent the injury at the point of hammer strike.

Applicable to
Pin driving and extraction during plant and port maintenance · Wedge and key driving and removal · Chipping, caulking, and chisel work during shutdown and rework · Any struck-tool task where one hand holds and the other strikes
06 · Control Category
Cut, Impact, and Abrasion PPE — Residual Protection

Cut-resistant, impact-resistant, and abrasion-resistant gloves remain important across cement, mining, and port environments — as the final layer of protection after the engineering controls above have reduced the primary exposure. At a chute clearing task, a glove does not protect against the crush or caught-between event if material shifts. At a hammering task, a glove does not prevent the impact. The engineering controls address the primary exposure; PPE addresses what remains after they have been applied.

Role in cement, mining and ports
Residual abrasion and cut protection during liner and plate handling after magnetic tools reduce edge contact · Residual impact protection during breakdown hammering after fingersavers remove hand from strike zone · Residual cut and abrasion protection during idler and roller handling after distance tools reduce direct contact · Not a substitute for any engineering control at its primary exposure point
Important — What Tools Do Not Replace

The controls described on this page reduce hand exposure at specific task points within the isolated work area. They do not replace machine guarding and interlocking systems, energy isolation and LOTO procedures, site lift plans and rigging procedures, confined space entry requirements, permit-to-work systems, or any applicable site safety management requirement. For any task involving running, energised, or pressurised equipment, the relevant isolation procedure must be completed and confirmed before any manual or tool-assisted intervention.

Exposure Audit Checklist

Use This Checklist on
Your Next Safety Walk

Any "yes" identifies an active hand exposure point that warrants a control review. Send findings with task photos to PSC Hand Safety for mapping and control recommendations.

Are workers reaching inside chutes or transfer points to clear blockages?
Are idlers and rollers gripped directly by hand during installation?
Are hands between liner plates and crusher shell during shutdown work?
Are hands on suspended component bodies during crane-assisted landing?
Are slings threaded underneath equipment by direct hand reach?
Are pins and chisels held by bare hand during hammering and extraction?
Are hatch covers and access panels pulled and pushed by gripping the edge?
Are workers standing in the load path during crane cargo landing?
Is the current control for breakdown hammering tasks only gloves?
Are ferrous plates, liners, and sections gripped by hand on sharp edges?
Are chute and crusher interventions performed before LOTO is confirmed?
Are breakdown tasks performed without proper pin-holding or striking tools?
Send Task Photos to PSC

We Will Map the Exposure
and Identify the Control

Send photos or videos of conveyor, chute, crusher, hopper, rigging, shutdown, or port handling tasks for exposure mapping. PSC Hand Safety can identify whether the task needs a standard tool, modified tool, custom interface, or work-method change.

For magnetic tool suitability in abrasive environments, include a photo of the component surface — scale, dust, wear coating, and surface condition all affect the assessment.

Include in Your Submission
  • Photo or short video of the task as currently performed
  • Facility type and area — cement plant, mine, port, processing facility
  • Specific task — chute clearing, roller replacement, liner change, rigging, breakdown
  • Component type, approximate weight, and material
  • Whether the component is ferrous — for magnetic tool suitability assessment
  • Current method — what the worker's hands are doing at the exposure point
  • Any past near miss or injury at this task
Submit Mapping Request WhatsApp +91-98851-49412
Request Mapping

Start With the Task.
We Will Map the Exposure.

PSC Hand Safety can work with your safety team, maintenance team, or operations management to map hand exposure across your facility — area by area, task by task. Start with the task or area of greatest concern.

Support Available
  • Task-level hand exposure mapping
  • Control category identification and tool recommendation
  • Magnetic tool suitability assessment for abrasive surfaces
  • Webinar for safety, maintenance, and operations teams
  • Trial kit evaluation
  • Custom tool assessment for chute, crusher, and port-specific tasks
PSC Hand Safety
sales@pschandsafety.com
+91-98851-49412
28, Founta Plaza, Suryabagh
Visakhapatnam – 530020, AP
Cement, Mining & Ports Enquiry
Describe the area or task of concern. We will map the hand exposure and recommend the applicable control category.
Thank you.
PSC Hand Safety will review your task details and respond shortly.
Click to attach — task photos, component surface images, or short videos (max 25MB)

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Book a Webinar for Your Operations Team

PSC Hand Safety can deliver a focused webinar for your safety, maintenance, and operations teams — covering conveyor, crusher, chute, rigging, and bulk handling hand exposure and the applicable control categories.