Summary Statement
A presentation on the basics of electrical safety, including terminology, an introduction to fundamentals of electricity, and ways to prevent electrocution.
Basic Electrical Safety
- Course not designed to teach you to work on electrical equipment.
- You will not be
qualified to work on electrical equipment.
- If you spot problems with electrical equipment you should report it to your supervisor.
Objectives
- Be familiar with the fundamental concepts of electricity.
- Be familiar with the effects of electricity on the human body.
- Be able to recognize
common electrical hazards.
- Be familiar with electrical protective devices.
Fundamentals of Electrical Hazards
- To flow electricity must have a complete path.
- Electricity flows through conductors
- water, metal,
the human body
- Insulators are non-conductors
- The human body is a conductor
Have You Ever Been Shocked?
THE BASICS
- More than 3 ma
- painful shock
- More than 10 ma
- muscle contraction
"no-let-go" danger
- More than 30 ma
- lung paralysis-
usually temporary
- More than 50 ma
- possible ventricular
fob. (heart dysfunction, usually fatal)
- 100 ma to 4 amps
- certain ventricular
fibrillation, fatal
- Over 4 amps
- heart paralysis; severe burns. Usually caused by >600 volts
- Hazards of Electricity
- Electrocution/Shock/Burns/Death
- Minimum distance from overhead lines 10 ft.
- Inspect all electrical tools and equipment
Frayed, cut, broken
wires
grounding prong missing
Improper use of cube taps
improperly applied or missing strain relief
- Circuit Breakers
- Provided to
protect EQUIPMENT not people
- Do not reset
breakers with a line voltage higher than 120V and only reset if
you know why it tripped
- Provided to
protect EQUIPMENT not people
- GFCI's
- Provided to protect people
- Trip range 4-6ma
- Monthly test
- Distance
- If you sense the presence of an electrical hazard or exposed conductors that may be energized, keep you distance and STAY AWAY
Terminology
Electrical Grounding
Figure 12 : Current flow in a properly grounded circuit
Figure 14: Shock from improperly grounded tool
Figure 15: Fault conditions sensed by a GFCI
Figure 16: Correctly wired duplex receptacle
Fundamentals of Electrical Hazards
- Voltage
- electrical
pressure (water pressure)
- Amperage
- electrical
flow rate (gallons/min)
- Impedance
- restriction to electrical flow (pipe friction)
- Circuit
- path of flow
of electricity
- path of flow
of electricity
- Circuit Element
- objects which
are part of a circuit and though which current flows.
- objects which
are part of a circuit and though which current flows.
- Fault
- current flow through an unintended path.
- What is Grounding?
- Protection
from electric shock
- normally
a secondary protection measure
- normally
a secondary protection measure
- Protection
from electric shock
- A ground is a
conductive connection
- between electrical
circuit or equipment and earth or ground plane
- creates a low resistance to the earth.
- between electrical
circuit or equipment and earth or ground plane
Basic Rules of Electrical Action
- Electricity isn’t live until current flows
- Electrical current won’t flow until there is a complete loop, out from and back to the power source.
Preventing Accidental Electrical Contact
Do's and Don'ts
- Do plug
power equipment into wall receptacles with power switches in the Off
position.
- Do unplug
electrical equipment by grasping the plug and pulling. Do not pull or
jerk the cord to unplug the equipment.
- Do not
drape power cords over hot pipes, radiators or sharp objects.
- Do check
the receptacle for missing or damaged parts.
- Do not
plug equipment into defective receptacles.
- Do check
for frayed, cracked, or exposed wiring on equipment cords
- Do check
for defective cords clamps at locations where the power cord enters
the equipment or the attachment plug.
- Extension cords
should not be used in office areas. Generally, extension cords should
be limited to use by maintenance personnel
- “Cheater
plugs”, extension cords with junction box receptacle ends or other
jury-rigged equipment should not be used.
- Consumer electrical
equipment or appliances should not be used if not properly grounded.
(Look for the UL Label)
- Employees should
know the location of electrical circuit breaker panels that control
equipment and lighting in their respective areas. Circuits and equipment
disconnects must be identified
- Temporary or permanent
storage of any materials must not be allowed within 3 feet of
any electrical panel or electrical equipment.
- Any electrical equipment causing shocks or with high leakage potential must be tagged with a Danger tag or equivalent.
Myths and Misconceptions
- Electricity takes
the path of least resistance.
- Electricity wants
to go to ground.
- If an electric
tools falls into a sink or tub of water, the item will short out.
- AC reverse polarity
is not hazardous.
- It takes high
voltage to kill; 120 volts is not dangerous.
- Double insulated power tools are doubly safe and can be used in wet and damp locations.