Clarke CAT117 Instruction Manual Page 12

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Parts & Service: 020 8988 7400 / E-mail: Parts@clarkeinternational.com or Service@clarkeinternational.com
VIBRATION EMISSIONS
Employers are advised to refer to the HSE publication “Guide for Employers”.
All hand held power tools vibrate to some extent, and this vibration is
transmitted to the operator via the handle, or hand used to steady the tool.
Vibration from about 2 to 1500 hertz is potentially damaging and is most
hazardous in the range from about 5 to 20 hertz.
Operators who are regularly exposed to vibration may suffer from Hand Arm
Vibration Syndrome (HAVS), which includes ‘dead hand’, ‘dead finger’, and
‘white finger’. These are painful conditions and are widespread in industries
where vibrating tools are used.
The health risk depends upon the vibration level and the length of time of
exposure to it……in effect, a daily vibration dose.
Tools are tested using specialised equipment, to approximate the vibration
level generated under normal, acceptable operating conditions for the tool in
question. For example, a grinder used at 45° on mild steel plate, or a sander on
soft wood in a horizontal plane etc.
These tests produce a value ‘a’, expressed in metres per second per second,
which represents the average vibration level of all tests taken, in three axes
where necessary, and a second figure ‘K’, which represents the uncertainty
factor, i.e. a value in excess of ‘a’, to which the tool could vibrate under
normal conditions. These values appear in the specification panel below.
You will note that a third value is given in the specification - the highest
measured reading in a single plane. This is the maximum level of vibration
measured during testing in one of the axes, and this should also be taken into
account when making a risk assessment.
‘a’ values in excess of 2.5 m/s
2
are considered hazardous when used for
prolonged periods. A tool with a vibration value of 2.8 m/s
2
may be used for up
to 8 hours (cumulative) per day, whereas a tool with a value of 11.2 m/s
2
may
be used for ½ hour per day only.
Model Number CAT117
Description impact wrench
Declared vibration emission value in accordance with EN12096
Measured vibration emission value - a:
2.6 m/s
2
at the Main Handle
K = 0.72 m/s
2
Value determined according to EN28622-1
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