As with any mechanical and electrical device, conveyors can present some safety concerns. Since they have many moving parts, anyone who works on, near, or around them should be well versed in conveyor safety -- and also why each rule is important and necessary.
Let's look at the standards CEMA, the Conveyor Equipment Manufacturers Association, has established for package conveyors:
Not following this rule can lead to injury, and it happens more often than you would like to believe.
It's imperative that workers never climb, sit, stand, walk, ride or even touch the conveyor line at any time. It's common sense, but people tend to get mischievous about it and there are injuries and equipment damage due to not following this rule every year.
It is plain old common sense to follow this rule. Don't perform any maintenance (or even open a panel or guard) until electrical, air, or hydraulic power sources are disconnected or blocked out. Block the incline on a gravity conveyor before getting to work on it. There are technicians who sometimes become too confident in their ability to work on machinery even when it's connected to power because they have been around it a long time and know it well. It's this kind of thinking that can lead to injuries.
They built the conveyors with guards for a reason - safety! Operating it without the guards is one of the most unsafe, and sadly, most common occurrences in the industry.
Guards are sometimes removed by plant employees for maintenance, or because they obstruct someone's access doing work. This exposes machinery, gears, chains, and moving parts that are extremely dangerous if left unguarded.
This simple safety standard helps preserve your conveying equipment because it helps prevent overheating.
Workers shouldn't ever load a conveyor when it's stopped, or overload it when it is running.
Workers should always be certain that everyone is clear of the conveyor before starting it up. Many times, factories install warning horns to alert workers that the conveyors are about to become active. This is an excellent, and relatively inexpensive safety upgrade you can make, but you shouldn't stop there. Training should also be included about what the warning horn means and how injuries can occur if it's ignored.
Only workers who have been trained should be permitted to operate and perform maintenance on conveyors. This is for two reasons: (1) Safety of the technician. Conveyors can be dangerous to those who do not thoroughly understand the equipment and how to safely work on it. (2) Only trained personnel can really maintain a conveyor to perform at peak efficiency. This isn't necessarily a safety concern, although it can be if sub par conveyor performance causes workers to try to look at it on their own or bypass guards. (Cisco-Eagle offers professional conveyor maintenance in some geographic areas)
Conveyor controls are not just on/off switches. They are any kind of electronic or mechanical devices used during conveyor operation. These controls should never be modified for any reason by unqualified personnel. Monitor your various controls to be sure no one has misused, modified, or disconnected them.
It cannot be stressed enough how important it is to keep clear of conveying equipment while it is in operation. This is one of the most common ways to be injured around a conveyor. Workers should keep their hands off of conveyors. Those with long hair, loose clothes, or ties should be exceptionally careful (or should bind their hair and clothes before going near the machinery). Ties should be thrown over the shoulder or tucked in. Long sleeves should be restrained or rolled up. Visitors to your plant should be briefed on safety and inspected for potential clothes or hair that could be caught before being allowed near the conveyor line.
It's important that the area around your conveyors be kept clean and as free of dirt, oil, etc. as much as possible to insure the equipment continues to operate efficiently. However, it is unsafe to do that cleaning and maintenance when the conveyor is powered and operating. Beyond that, you should familiarize cleaning crews with conveyor safety as well as your conveyor operators, pickers, packers, etc.
In case a conveyor needs to be stopped suddenly, all the controls and pull cords need to be easily accessible and plainly visible so that anyone working in the area can reach them.
By the same token, anyone who regularly works in a conveyor area must be familiar with the location and function of stop and start controls. The controls must be marked to avoid confusion and allow people to make fast decisions on using them. Training should be given to all employees about the controls, where they are, when to use them, and how to access them. It's best if this fundamental safety training is repeated frequently, and especially so if you reconfigure your plant, change layout, or update equipment.
You should have a culture of safety around your conveyors that encourages workers to report unsafe conditions like loose guards, people working too closely with the conveyors with unrestrained clothes or hair, etc. Training about safety issues and when to report them should be made to all employees and repeated often. Untrained people trying to clear conveyor jams can result in unsafe situations as well as damaged equipment. Workers should be trained to call facility maintenance to clear jams.
While these safety rules are deemed the most obvious and most important by CEMA, each employee should be on alert for potential safety concerns while working around conveyor equipment.