Header

Unsecured Pulpwood Log Damages Truck Cab

 

 

 

BACKGROUND:
On a clear, summer day in the Appalachians, a logging employee was driving (“spotting”) a load of logs from the log deck to a trailer drop site near the end of the woods road for pickup by a different truck. The road was dry and the terrain was rolling.

PERSONAL CHARACTERISTICS:
One of the work responsibilities of this employee was to use a chain saw to top hardwood timber at the log deck, trim the load on the trailer, and ferry the load and drop the trailer close to a hard-surface road. The 58-year-old employee had been working for this logging business for three years and had no known physical disabilities or previous accident history. He was wearing chaps, safety glasses, and a hard hat.

UNSAFE ACTS AND CONDITIONS:
The worker trimmed the load at the deck and then drove the load out to a drop area to be picked up later. He did not strap down the load because normally the “on the road” drivers strapped their own loads. Neither the log trailer nor the spot tractor (i.e., a truck that is not used on the highway) was equipped with a headache rack. The woods road was hilly.

ACCIDENT:
As the driver descended a small hill on the woods road, the top pulpwood log (a rough piece approximately 14 feet long and tapering from 14” down to 6” in diameter) on the front rack of wood slipped off the load and fell vertically down between the tires and the fuel tank. As the truck continued to move forward, the back tires of the tractor ran up on the log. This caused the log to slam forward and onto the top of the truck cab.

INJURY:
The log damaged the top of the cab and driver’s side door in such a way that the driver’s side door could not be opened. The driver was not injured, but he had to exit the truck from the passenger side and had to call for the skidder to dislodge the log.

RECOMMENDATIONS FOR CORRECTION:
• Move the loaded truck clear away from the log loading deck before trimming the load (or stop the loader if trimming the load at the deck) and secure the load before moving it to the drop site.

• Every driver must be responsible for ensuring that his load is properly secured before leaving the job, and the load should be rechecked before entering a public road.

• Every truck/tractor or log trailer should have a headache rack to guard against shifting logs.

Courtesy of the Forest Resources Association: forestresources.org

Latest News

UNSAFE TRACTOR-TRAILER CONNECTION

UNSAFE TRACTOR-TRAILER CONNECTION

BACKGROUND: On a spring day in the Southeast, a log truck unloaded under an overhead crane at a pulp mill and then traveled empty to a satellite woodyard, where the driver expected his trailer to be loaded. PERSONAL CHARACTERISTICS: The log truck driver was an...

MECHANIC INJURES ARM WHILE WORKING ON SKIDDER BLADE

MECHANIC INJURES ARM WHILE WORKING ON SKIDDER BLADE

BACKGROUND: On a late winter morning at a log landing in the Appalachians, a maintenance mechanic and a logging crew member were installing a replacement cutting edge on a skidder blade. Weather conditions were fair and cold. PERSONAL CHARACTERISTICS: Both the...

Have A Question?

Send Us A Message