Summary
Figure 1. Incident Scene |
RECOMMENDATIONS
- Do Not "prop up" farm machines using angle bracing/supports during maintenance/repair procedures. Machines and equipment should be supported with solid wood blocking on solid work surfaces and according to the manufacturer's instructions.
- Block both sides of wheels on partially raised farm equipment with trailing wheels.
- Turn off tractor engine and set brakes during maintenance work, unless specified by manufacturer.
- Do Not rely on the hydraulic system on farm equipment to hold raised equipment for repair, inspection or adjustment.
A 56-year-old horse farm owner was killed when he was crushed under a rotary mower while changing the cutting blades. MIFACE researchers were informed of the farm work-related fatality by a newspaper clipping. MIFACE researchers interviewed the victim's wife and viewed and photographed the area where the incident occurred and the rotary mower. During the course of writing this report, the medical examiner's report, death certificate, police department report, and relevant sections of the Bush Hog Model 3210 operator's manual were obtained. Figure 1 and Figure3 are photographs taken at the scene by the responding police department. Figure 2 was taken at the time of the MIFACE farm visit.
The victim owned several commercial stores and had owned the horse farm where the incident occurred for 10 years. The horse farm consisting of 65 acres had 20 horses. In addition to the horse farm, the victim raised hay on another 80 acres that was cut and baled by another farmer. The victim had been active in horse breeding for 30 years and was very experienced operating and repairing farm equipment. The farm did not have a written health and safety plan.
INVESTIGATION
Figure 2. Location of mower while being repaired |
According to his wife, the victim normally did all maintenance and repair on the mower outside of the utility barn on a concrete pad. When he worked under the mower the victim propped up the mower with the loader bucket, chained the mower to the bucket and used boards and posts to keep it off the ground. His wife stated that he normally did the mower maintenance. Often, his wife would assist him because it required a great deal of strength to apply torque to the blades to remove them. The Bush Hog model 3210 operator's manual specified that the nuts on the blade bolts were to be tightened to 450 ft./lbs.
On the day of the incident, the victim had performed several tasks around the farm. In the afternoon, the victim drove the tractor to the location of the rotary mower. He took with him a sharpened set of mower blades. His wife had advised him earlier in the day that she wanted to assist him. He was working alone and the incident was unwitnessed.
The following two possible event scenarios have been developed after interviews with the deceased's wife and the responding police agency. Figure 3 shows the pieces of wood that were thought to be used as supports for the mower.
Figure 3. Wood used for mower support |
Scenario 2: The mower was positioned in loose soil resembling mortar sand. Using the front-end loader bucket on the tractor, he raised the front of the mower by placing the bucket under the mower tongue. The mower tongue was kept in the raised bucket as a primary support point. The tractor was left in "idle" to maintain hydraulic pressure. The parking brake on the tractor was not set. The timber was placed under the mower and tongue as described in Scenario 1. The mower's trailing wheels were not blocked.
After propping up the mower as described in scenario 1 or 2, he began to work under the mower. Using a socket wrench, he had partially removed some dull blades. Possibly while exerting torque to remove the nuts holding the blades to the mower, the timber supporting the mower shifted. With the timber shifting in the loose soil, the mower rolled back a short distance completely dislodging the support timbers resulting in the mower fell on the victim's chest. Police found indentations in the soil where it appeared that the mower wheels had been resting for a period of time. The police measured from these indentations to the final resting point of the mower's rear support wheels. The mower rolled approximately 46 inches away from the tractor because there is no indication that the tractor moved. The victim was pinned to the ground under the front end of the mower. If Scenario #2 occurred, vibration from the idling tractor in addition to the torque exertion may have dislodged the unsecured mower tongue from the bucket, causing the mower to fall against the timber, dislodging the timber and causing the mower to fall to the ground.
When the victim did not return to the house, the victim's wife and daughter drove around the property looking for him. When they arrived at the incident site, they found the tractor running in "idle" about four feet away from the mower, with the bucket raised about five feet in the air. There was a chain that appeared to be unused in the bucket. There were blades and nuts on the ground but whether they were the sharpened blades he brought with him or the mower blades he was replacing is unknown. The victim's wife directed her daughter to go to the house to call 911 while she tried to free the victim. The victim's wife attempted to raise the mower by placing the bucket under the mower's tongue. She was unable to do so. Emergency response arrived, removed the victim from under the mower and took him to a local hospital where he was declared dead.
After the incident, the family sold the large mower and replaced it with a smaller one.
CAUSE OF DEATH
The cause of death as stated on the death certificate was hypoxia secondary to chest crush injury. Toxicological tests were not performed.
RECOMMENDATIONS/DISCUSSION
- Do Not "prop up" farm machines using angle bracing/supports during maintenance/repair procedures. Machines and equipment should be supported with solid wood blocking on solid work surfaces and according to the manufacturer's instructions.
When working on a large piece of equipment that is elevated, consideration should be given to the center of gravity of that object. An elevated load is unstable to begin with and an un-level surface will allow the center of gravity of the load to shift more rapidly to the down side. Any movement caused by work being performed on the load could also cause the load to slip off a support, especially if it is not properly blocked or cribbed.
Since changing blades was a routine job, appropriate supports would have been needed often and should have been available.
Always take the time to adequately support an elevated piece of equipment when performing repairs or adjustments to prevent being crushed. Even a very small, quick adjustment such as tightening a bolt warrants using appropriate support methods when you are under raised equipment. Using suitable supports, such as cribbing and blocking under the raised mower deck could have prevented this fatal injury. See Attachment A for further information about cribbing and blocking.
- Block both sides of wheels on partially raised farm equipment with trailing wheels.
- Turn off tractor engine and set brakes during maintenance work, unless specified by manufacturer.
- Do Not rely on the hydraulic system on farm equipment to hold raised equipment for repair, inspection or adjustment.
It does not appear that in this case, there was a loss of hydraulic pressure that caused the mower to come down and land on the victim. The bucket was found in the raised position, not near the ground. It would be unsafe if the mower tongue was placed in the raised bucket and an operator relied on the hydraulics to maintain pressure to keep the mower lifted without adequate secondary supports, as such a system could fail unexpectedly.
REFERENCES
MIOSHA Standards cited in this report can be directly accessed from the Michigan Department of Labor and Economic Growth, MIOSHA website www.michigan.gov/mioshastandards. The standards can also be obtained for a fee by writing to the following address: Department of Labor and Economic Growth, MIOSHA, Management and Technical Services Division, MIOSHA Standards Section, P.O. Box 30649, Lansing, MI 48909-8149. The Management and Technical Services Division phone number is (517) 322-1817.
- MIOSHA General Industry Safety Standard, Part 1, General Provisions, Rule 34 (Machine Guards and Devices)
- MIOSHA General Industry Safety Standard Part 38 (Hand and Portable Powered Tools), Rule 3839(4)
Don't Trust Your Life to a Hydraulic System. Mark Purschwitz, Wisconsin Farm Safety and Health Specialist, Minnesota/Wisconsin Engineering Notes. (Article no longer available online.)
Res-Q-Jack Information CenterTM, "Rescue Cribbing Use", Billy Leach Jr. Reference Information. Internet address: http://www.res-q-jack.com/Res-Q-Jack-Education/Rescue-Cribbing-Use.html
MIFACE (Michigan Fatality and Control Evaluation), Michigan State University (MSU) Occupational & Environmental Medicine, 117 West Fee Hall, East Lansing, Michigan 48824-1315. This information is for educational purposes only. This MIFACE report becomes public property upon publication and may be printed verbatim with credit to MSU. Reprinting cannot be used to endorse or advertise a commercial product or company. All rights reserved. MSU is an affirmative-action, equal opportunity employer.
Attachment A - Cribbing and Blocking
Figure 4. Example of cribbing |
Most jacks are designed to lift heavy objects, not support them. Proper use of a jack involves knowing the weight limit and proper placement of the jack. Once a jack lifts a heavy object, the object must then be supported by either a jack stand or cribbing. A "jack stand" normally refers to a metal adjustable support with a center post that adjusts and side stabilizers that hold the device straight. Cribbing is the process whereby blocks of wood are placed under the object to support it in an elevated position. Supporting elevated objects with jack stands or cribbing ensures stability of the object especially when work has to be performed under the object. Wood selected for blocking or cribbing should be solid, straight and free of major flaws such as large knots or splits and be free of any paint or finish because this can make the wood slippery, especially when it is wet.
Blocking timbers should be used to provide a foundation for heavy loads or jacks when the jack is not placed on a firm foundation. Most jacks are designed to lift a load straight up. This is why it is essential to assure that the surface the load is on is level. Often during field equipment repair operations, the surface is not firm or even. Blocking timbers should be placed so they rest evenly and firmly on the ground.
Cribbing should be used when the equipment must be supported at a height greater than blocking can provide. Cribbing involves placing timber in tiers that run in alternate directions. To place cribbing, raise the load and without placing yourself under the elevated load, place the cribbing under the load. (See Figure 4). Then lower the load onto the cribbing. If using a jack to raise the load, make sure the jack is on a firm foundation (use blocking timbers as required), raise the load to the maximum height the jack can safely lift to, place cribbing, then lower the load.