Metal Conveyor Belt Kills
Installation Supervisor
A 35-year-old
supervisor from an out-of-state manufacturing company was killed
while he was overseeing installation of a heavy metal conveyor
belt at a recycling plant. This conveyor system was designed to
move recycled materials from ground level to a new elevated sorting
line. Installation workers were assembling the metal conveyor
belt at ground level and pulling it up a 30-degree incline using
hand-operated winches. When the conveyor belt reached the top
of the incline, the workers were rearranging their winches to
pull the belt around the top roller. To hold the conveyor belt
in place they attached a safety chain to a 2x2 piece
of angle iron which was welded temporarily to a 4x4
angle iron sweep on the conveyor. They had repeated the same procedure
earlier when the conveyor was in lower positions.
However, at this time, because of jerky movements, the temporary weld on the 2"x2" angle failed, and the entire conveyor belt rapidly slid down the 44-foot-long incline and bunched up on the ground level. The victim was standing on or walking over the conveyor at ground level and was knocked down and dragged through a narrow space between the belt and the conveyor frame, causing extensive crush injuries to his truck and extremities. The man was dead at the scene. All installation procedures were directed by the victim, including the 2"x2" angle iron piece that failed.