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#1 Posted : 30 October 2006 13:46:00(UTC)
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Posted By Malcolm Greenhouse I have to inspect a wood working shop for the first time in the near future. For all other premises I inspect I have a generic check list. Does anyone have such a thing for a wood working shop? Cheers Mal
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#2 Posted : 30 October 2006 13:52:00(UTC)
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Posted By MetalMan What sort of inspection are you going to be carrying out Malcolm? Not trying to teach you to suck eggs etc. but all sorts of things to check in a woodworking shop, puwer/dsear/coshh to name a few.
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#3 Posted : 30 October 2006 13:55:00(UTC)
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Posted By Jane Blunt I would start out with the HSE pages, which are very informative: http://www.hse.gov.uk/woodworking/index.htm Regards Jane
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#4 Posted : 30 October 2006 13:58:00(UTC)
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Posted By Ron Hunter Or fork out £50+ for relevant guide from British Woodworking Federation? http://www.bwf.org.uk/th...nforming.cfm?area=guides
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#5 Posted : 30 October 2006 15:06:00(UTC)
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Posted By Anthony Slinger HSE ACOP L114 is a good starting point. This is the PUWER ACOP as applied to woodworking machines. It has examples of training records, competence of operators, in house training, guarding, specific hazards, etc.
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#6 Posted : 30 October 2006 15:24:00(UTC)
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Posted By Salus don't forget your LEV
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#7 Posted : 31 October 2006 11:07:00(UTC)
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Posted By Ali Also, the HSE produce excellent HSE information sheets on Woodworking (compiled by HSE's Woodworking National Interest Group)and are easily accessible. They contain diagrams, pictures and are easy to understand.
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#8 Posted : 31 October 2006 11:42:00(UTC)
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Posted By Pete48 Malcolm, and above all, remember that this is a specialist area where experience is very important. If you do not have any experience in this area, then make sure you limit any report to your level of competence. You can go and ask questions about how H&S has been assessed and managed but will you be able to determine the acceptance/suitability of any responses with regard to technical matters such as acceptable safeguards etc? Reference to the documents noted so far will give you a good base to use to challenge any responses that do not meet the criteria they outline. I have no wish to frighten you away from doing the inspection or to start another discussion about "experts" or "competence". Just be very cautious about the lack of experience that you freely admit. There are successful prosecutions on record of people who have "inspected" or "assessed" woodworking workshops and not identified unsafe matters thus leading to later accidents that could have been prevented with proper controls.
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