Utah Admin. Code R614-3-18 - Guarding of Farm Field Equipment, Farmstead Equipment
A. This section applies to all farm field
equipment and farmstead equipment manufactured after October 25, 1976.
Equipment manufactured prior to that date shall meet the manufacturers
specifications for guards.
B.
Operating instructions. At the time of initial assignment and at least annually
thereafter, the employer shall instruct every employee in the safe operation
and servicing of all covered equipment with which he is or will be involved,
including at least the following safe operating practices:
1. Keep all guards in place when the machine
is in operation.
2. Permit no
riders on farm field equipment other than persons required for instruction or
assistance in machine operation;
3.
Stop engine, disconnect the power source, and wait for all machine movement to
stop before servicing, adjusting, cleaning, or unclogging the equipment, except
where the machine must be running to be properly serviced or maintained, in
which case the employer shall instruct employees as to all steps and procedures
which are necessary to safely service or maintain the equipment;
4. Make sure everyone is clear of machinery
before starting the engine, engaging power, or operating the machine;
5. Lock out power before performing
maintenance or service on farmstead equipment.
C. Methods of guarding. Each employer shall
protect employees from coming into contact with hazards created by moving
machinery parts as follows:
1. Through the
installation and use of a guard or shield or guarding by location.
2. Whenever a guard or shield or guarding by
location is infeasible, by using a guardrail or fence.
D. Strength and design of guards.
1. Where guards are used to provide the
protection required by this section, they shall be designed and located to
protect against inadvertent contact with the hazard being guarded.
2. Unless otherwise specified, each guard and
its supports shall be capable of withstanding the force that a 250 pound
individual, leaning on or falling against the guard, would exert upon that
guard.
E. Guards shall
be free from burrs, sharp edges, and sharp corners, and shall be securely
fastened to the equipment or building.
F. Guarding by location. A component is
guarded by location during operation, maintenance, or servicing when, because
of its location, no employee can inadvertently come in contact with the hazard
during such operation, maintenance, or servicing. Where the employer can show
that any exposure to hazards results from employee conduct which constitutes an
isolated and unforeseeable event, the component shall also be considered
guarded by location.
G. Guarding by
railings. Guardrails or fences shall be capable of protecting against employees
inadvertently entering the hazardous area.
H. Servicing and maintenance. Whenever a
moving machinery part presents a hazard during servicing or maintenance, the
engine shall be stopped, the power source disconnected, and all machine
movement stopped before servicing or maintenance is performed, except where the
employer can establish that:
1. The equipment
must be running to be properly serviced or maintained;
2. The equipment cannot be serviced or
maintained while a guard or guards otherwise required by this standard are in
place; and
3. The servicing or
maintenance can be safely performed.
I. Farm field equipment
1. Power take off guarding. All power take
off shafts, including rear, mid or side mounted shafts, shall be guarded either
by a master shield or by other protective guarding.
a. All tractors shall be equipped with an
agricultural tractor master shield on the rear power take off except where
removal of the tractor master shield is permitted by (2). The master shield
shall have sufficient strength to prevent permanent deformation of the shield
when a 250 pound operator mounts or dismounts the tractor using the shield as a
step.
b. Power take off driven
equipment shall be guarded to protect against employee contact with positively
driven rotating members of the power drive system. Where power take off driven
equipment is of a design requiring removal of the tractor master shield, the
equipment shall also include protection from that portion of the tractor power
take off shaft which protrudes from the tractor.
c. Signs shall be placed at prominent
locations on tractors and power take off driven equipment specifying that power
drive system safety shields must be kept in place.
2. Other power transmission components.
a. The mesh or nip points of all power driven
gears, belts, chains, sheaves, pulleys, sprockets, and idlers shall be
guarded.
b. All revolving shafts,
including projections such as bolts, keys, or set screws, shall be guarded,
except smooth shaft ends protruding less than one half the outside diameter of
the shaft and its locking means.
c.
Ground driven components shall be guarded if any employee may be exposed to
them while the drives are in motion.
3. Functional components. Functional
components, such as snapping or husking rolls, straw spreaders and choppers,
cutterbars, flail rotors, rotary beaters, mixing augers, feed rolls, conveying
augers, rotary tillers, and similar units, which must be exposed for proper
function, shall be guarded to the fullest extent which will not substantially
interfere with normal functioning of the component.
4. Access to moving parts. Guards, shields,
and access doors shall be in place when the equipment is in operation. Where
removal of a guard or access door will expose an employee to any component
which continues to rotate after the power is disengaged, the employer shall
provide, in the immediate area, the following:
a. A readily visible or audible warning of
rotation; and
b. A safety sign
warning the employee to look and listen for evidence of rotation and not remove
the guard or access door until all components have stopped.
J. Farmstead equipment.
1. Power take off guarding.
a. All power take off shafts, including rear,
mid, or side mounted shafts, shall be guarded either by a master shield or
other protective guarding.
b. Power
take off driven equipment shall be guarded to protect against employee contact
with positively driven rotating members of the power drive system.
c. Where power take off driven equipment is
of a design requiring removal of the tractor master shield, the equipment shall
also include protection from that portion of the tractor power take off shaft
which protrudes from the tractor.
d. Signs shall be placed at prominent
locations on power take off driven equipment specifying that power drive system
safety shields must be kept in place.
2. Other power transmission components. The
mesh or nip points of all power driven gears, belts, chains, sheaves, pulleys,
sprockets, and idlers shall be guarded. All revolving shafts, including
projections such as bolts, keys, or set screws, shall be guarded, with the
exception of:
a. Smooth shafts and shaft ends
(without any projecting bolts, keys, or set screws), revolving at less than 10
rpm, on feed handling equipment used on the top surface of materials in bulk
storage facilities; and
b. Smooth
shaft ends protruding less than one half the outside diameter of the shaft and
its locking means.
3.
Functional components, such as choppers, rotary beaters, mixing augers, feed
rolls, conveying augers, grain spreaders, stirring augers, sweep augers, and
feed augers, which must be exposed for proper function, shall be guarded to the
fullest extent which will not substantially interfere with the normal
functioning of the component. All accessible screw conveyors shall be guarded
by substantial covers or gratings, or with an inverted horizontally slotted
guard of the trough type, which will prevent employees from coming into contact
with the screw conveyor. Such guards may consist of horizontal bars spaced so
as to allow material to be fed into the conveyor, and supported by arches which
are not more than 8 feet apart. Screw conveyors under gin stands shall be
considered guarded by location.
4.
Sweep arm material gathering mechanisms used on the top surface of materials
within silo structures shall be guarded. The lower or leading edge of the guard
shall be located no more than 12 inches above the material surface and no less
than 6 inches in front of the leading edge of the rotating member of the
gathering mechanism. The guard shall be parallel to, and extend the fullest
practical length of, the material gathering mechanism.
5. Exposed auger flighting on portable grain
augers shall be guarded with either grating type guards or solid baffle type
covers as follows:
a. The largest dimensions
or openings in grating type guards through which materials are required to flow
shall be 4-3/4 inches. The area of each opening shall be no larger than 10
square inches. The opening shall be located no closer to the rotating flighting
than 2-1/2 inches.
b. Slotted
openings in solid baffle type covers shall be no wider than 1-1/2 inches, or
closer than 3-1/2 inches to the exposed flighting.
6. Access to moving parts. Guards, shields,
and access doors shall be in place when the equipment is in operation. Where
removal of a guard or access door will expose an employee to any component
which continues to rotate after the power is disengaged, the employer shall
provide, in the immediate area, the following:
a. A readily visible or audible warning of
rotation; and
b. A safety sign
warning the employee to:
(1) look and listen
for evidence of rotation; and
(2)
not remove the guard or access door until all components have
stopped.
K. Electrical disconnect means. Application
of electrical power from a location not under the immediate and exclusive
control of the employee or employees maintaining or servicing equipment shall
be prevented by:
1. providing an exclusive,
positive, locking means on the main switch which can be operated only by the
employee or employees performing the maintenance or servicing; or
2. there is an electrical disconnect switch
available to the employee within 15 feet of the equipment upon which
maintenance or service is being performed; and
3. a sign is prominently posted near each
hazardous component which warns the employee that unless the electrical
disconnect switch is utilized, the motor could automatically reset while the
employee is working on the hazardous component.
Notes
State regulations are updated quarterly; we currently have two versions available. Below is a comparison between our most recent version and the prior quarterly release. More comparison features will be added as we have more versions to compare.
No prior version found.