Maintenance Break
Four metres. That's not a stumble — that's a life-changer. In this episode, Pete and Drew break down Safety Alert SA26-02 out of the Hunter Valley, where a worker fell from a Hitachi EX5600 excavator after a guardrail stanchion — weakened by an aftermarket modification and an undetected crack — simply snapped. Running the incident through the JEBS PCR Triad, Pete and Drew unpack how chasing Performance through platform modifications introduced hidden failure, how ignoring the small Cost of a repair weld led to millions in lost production while the investigation was carried out, and how normalised Risk blindness let a cracked stanchion surviving operator pre-starts, fortnightly PMs, and dedicated structural inspections alike. The hard truth? "Tick and flick" inspections and equipment blindness don't just hurt your asset — they put your mates on the ground. Break Tip: Next time you're on an excavator or walking the plant, take a critical look at the walkway guardrails and stanchion posts around you. If something's not right, don't assume it's already been reported — follow through and get it into the system. That's how you keep your mates safe. The full Safety Alert details can be found here: https://www.resources.nsw.gov.au/sites/default/files/2026-03/SA26-02-fall-from-excavator-breaks-workers-legs.pdf [https://www.resources.nsw.gov.au/sites/default/files/2026-03/SA26-02-fall-from-excavator-breaks-workers-legs.pdf]
22 episodios
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