Steel plates are widely used in construction sites, steel fabrication yards, shipbuilding docks, and heavy engineering workshops.
These plates are typically large, flat, and extremely heavy, often measuring several meters in length and width, with weights ranging from a few hundred kilograms to several tons.
During daily operations, rigging teams use overhead cranes, chain slings, or magnet lifters to lift, transfer, and position these plates for cutting, welding, or installation.
Despite the use of lifting equipment, final alignment and stabilization of the plates often require human guidance.
Traditionally, riggers and helpers place their hands directly on the steel surface to control swing, stop rotation, or nudge the plate into position.
According to industry safety data, hand and finger injuries consistently rank among the top lost-time incidents in steel handling operations. Even minor incidents lead to medical treatment, work restrictions, and production slowdowns, impacting project timelines and profitability.
During a typical morning shift at a steel fabrication yard, a 5-ton steel plate was being lowered by an overhead crane into a staging area.
As the plate descended, it began to swing slightly due to wind and uneven chain tension.
A rigger stepped in to stabilize it by placing his gloved hand on the plate’s edge to control the swing.
Suddenly, the crane operator adjusted the controls to counter the movement, causing a quick lateral shift of the plate.
The rigger’s hand was caught between the plate and an adjacent beam.
Fortunately, the worker was wearing heavy-duty gloves and managed to pull back in time, suffering only a painful bruise and swelling.
If the plate had shifted just a few centimeters more, the worker could have sustained:
Handling and positioning suspended steel plates without proper tools exposes workers to:
The key lesson from this near-miss is clear:
“Flat loads should never mean flat hands.”
Direct contact with suspended steel plates creates unnecessary risk.
No matter how experienced the rigger, human reflexes cannot compete with the sudden force of a swinging plate.
Keeping hands completely out of the strike zone is the only way to guarantee safety.
The HSF Riggersafe Push Pull Hand Safety Tool is specifically engineered to eliminate the need for direct hand contact when guiding large, flat loads like steel plates.
When the HSF Riggersafe Push Pull Hand Safety Tool is used:
“Flat loads. No flat hands.”
HSF Riggersafe Push Pull Hand Safety Tool protect riggers by keeping their hands out of the danger zone while maintaining full operational control.
Contact HSF to learn how HSF Riggersafe Push Pull Hand Safety Tool can improve steel plate rigging safety, reduce incidents, and maintain productivity across your heavy lifting operations.
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If you want to see how the HSF Riggersafe Push Pull Hand Safety Tool can improve your rigging operations,
Send us a Mail on info@handsafetyfirst.com
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