Current through all regulations passed and filed through September 16, 2024
(B) Definitions.
(1) "Air lock" means a chamber designed for
the passage of employees and materials from one air pressure to a greater or
lesser air pressure.
(2) "Bulkhead"
means an airtight structure separating the working chamber from free air or
from another chamber under a greater or lesser pressure than the working
pressure.
(3) "Caisson" means a
wood, steel, concrete or reinforced concrete, air-and water-tight chamber in
which it is possible for men to work under air pressure greater than
atmospheric pressure to excavate the material below water level.
(4) "Decanting" means a method used for
decompressing under emergency circumstances. In this procedure, the employees
are brought to atmospheric pressure with a very high gas tension in the tissues
and then immediately recompressed in a second and separate chamber or
lock.
(5) "Emergency lock" means a
lock designed to hold and permit the quick passage of an entire shift of
employees.
(6)
"Hazardous concentrations" as applied to air
contaminants, means concentrations which are known to be in excess of
recognized occupational exposure limits such as, but not exclusively, the OSHA
permissible exposure limits (OSHA-PEL), national institute for occupational
safety and health recommended exposure limits (NIOSH-REL) or American
conference of governmental industrial hygienists' threshold limit values (ACGIH
TLV).
(7) "High air" means air pressure used to supply power
to pneumatic tools and devices.
(8) "Low air" means
air supplied to pressurize working chambers and locks.
(9)
"Manlock" means an airlock for personnel.
(10) "Materials lock"
means an airlock for materials and equipment.
(11) "Medical lock"
means a special chamber in which employees are treated for decompression
illness.
(12) "Normal condition" means one during which
exposure to compressed air is limited to a single continuous working period
followed by a single decompression in any given twenty-four-hour period.
A second exposure should not occur for at least twelve
hours after normal atmospheric pressure has passed.
(13)
"Safety screen" means an air-and water-tight diaphragm placed across the upper
part of a compressed air tunnel between the face and bulkhead in order to
prevent flooding the crown of the tunnel.
(14) "Shafting" means
an air-and water-tight enclosure built in the roof of the caisson and extended
upward until above the normal ground or water level.
(15) "Working
chamber" means the space or compartment under air pressure in which the work is
being done.
(16) "Working face" (work face) means the transverse
face of the tunnel heading at the point of greatest advancement of the tunnel
excavation.
(C) General.
(1) Access to unattended underground openings
shall be restricted by gates or doors. Unused chutes, manways, or other
openings shall be tightly covered, bulkheads, or fenced off, and posted.
(2) Where hazardous settlement of
the earth has occurred the area shall be fenced and posted.
(3) Each operation shall have a check-in and
check-out system that will provide identification of every employee
underground.
(4) All pipe, fittings
and wires extending in shafts, tunnels and caissons shall be securely fastened
in place.
(D) Tunnels
and shafts.
(1) Emergency provisions.
(a) Evacuation plans and procedures shall be
developed and made known to the employees.
(b) Emergency hoisting facilities shall be
readily available at shafts more than fifty feet in depth, unless the regular
hoisting facilities are independent of electrical power failures.
(c) Approved self-contained breathing
apparatus shall be available near the advancing face adequate in number to
equip each employee at the face. Such items shall be on the haulage equipment
and in other areas where employees might be trapped by smoke or gas.
(d) A method of affording instant
communications shall be provided between the work face and the tunnel portal,
and such method shall be independent of the tunnel power supply.
(e) Safety belts shall be worn on skips and
platforms used in shafts unless guardrails or cages are provided.
(2) Ground support.
(a) The exposed faces of tunnel excavations
(except the portion being worked on at the particular time) and shafts made in
material other than rock shall be supported and held in place by a securely
fastened bracing system.
(b)
Damaged or dislodge tunnel supports, whether steel sets or timber, shall be
repaired or replaced. New supports shall be installed whenever possible before
removing the damaged supports.
(c)
All sets, including horseshoe-shaped or arched rib steel sets, shall be
designed and installed so that the bottoms shall be securely anchored to
prevent pressures from pushing them inward into the excavation. Lateral bracing
shall be provided between sets to further stabilize the support.
(3) Ventilation.
(a)
Employees shall be evacuated
from the tunnel or shaft if ventilation fails.
Before employees are permitted to enter or reenter the tunnel or shaft, ventilation shall be restarted and the area shall be
examined, for gas and other atmospheric
hazards by an employee designated by the employer the
person checking air quality shall be knowledgeable in direct reading
instruments and how to interpret readings from the instruments.
(b) Under no circumstances shall a tunnel or
shaft be entered to make any of the following prescribed tests.
(i) No employer shall permit entrance into
any tunnel or shaft unless an entry procedure, incorporating one of the
following, is used:
(a) Air sampling shall be
performed by qualified, trained personnel prior to and periodically during
occupancy to determine either that:
(i) The
atmosphere within the tunnel or shaft contains an adequate quantity of oxygen (
19.5 per cent) and harmful atmospheric contaminants have been diluted to safe
concentrations; or
(ii) Adequate
mechanically induced dilution ventilation is used prior to entry and continued
in use during occupancy to ensure that no less than 19.5 per cent oxygen is
maintained in the tunnel or shaft.
(b) A supplied-air respirator or
self-contained breathing apparatus is provided and used.
(ii) When the tunnel or shaft has been
exposed to, contained, or is likely to have combustible gases within its
confines (such as sewage treatment plants), it shall not be entered if
a
hazardous concentration of combustible gas
is detected.
(iii) If tests under paragraph
(D)(3)(b)(i)(a) or (D)(3)(b)(ii) of this rule indicate that the atmosphere in
the tunnel or shaft to be entered contains:
(a) Any concentration of flammable vapor or
gas; and/or,
(b) A
hazardous concentration of toxic contaminants
;
and/or
(c) Less than 19.5 per cent
oxygen; then appropriate control measures shall be instituted. Control measures
may consist of forced or natural ventilation, use of personal protective
equipment, a combination of these, or other effective control
techniques.
(c) Internal combustion engines other than
approved mobile diesel powered equipment shall not be used underground.
(4) Illumination.
Lighting of no less than ten lumens shall be provided at the
tunnel and shaft headings and no less than five lumens elsewhere in the tunnel
or shaft where employees are required to work.
(5) Fire prevention and control.
(a) Signs warning against smoking and open
flames shall be posted so that they can be readily seen in areas or places
where fire or explosion hazards exist.
(b) The carrying of matches, lighters, or
other flame-producing smoking materials is prohibited in all underground
operations.
(c) Gasoline and
liquefied petroleum gases shall not be taken, stored or used
underground.
(d) Oil and grease
stored underground shall be kept in tightly sealed containers in fire-resistant
enclosures at least three hundred feet from underground
explosive magazines and at least one hundred feet from shaft stations and steep
incline passageways.
(e) Air
that has passed through underground oil storage areas shall not be used to
ventilate working areas.
(f)
Approved fire-resistant hydraulic fluids shall be used in hydraulically
actuated underground machinery and equipment.
(g) Fires shall not be built
underground.
(h) Noncombustible
barriers shall be installed below welding or burning operations that are
performed in or over a shaft.
(i)
Fire extinguishers or equivalent protection shall be provided at the head and
tail pulleys of underground belt conveyors and at three-hundred-foot intervals
along the belt line.
(j) Sufficient
employees trained in the use, care and limitations of
self-contained breathing apparatus
(SCBA) and the use of fire fighting equipment
shall be on duty on each shift in tunnel operations.
(6) Personal protective equipment.
Protective clothing or equipment shall be worn as specified in
rule
4123:1-3-03
of the Administrative Code.
(7) Hearing protection.
Employees exposed to
a time-weighted
average (TWA) of noise levels of ninety or more decibels (>90dBA TWA) slow
response shall be provided with approved
hearing
protection.
(8)
Drilling.
(a) Employees shall not be required
to be on a drill mast while the drill bit is in operation.
(b) When a drill is being moved from one
drilling area to another, drill steel, tools, and other equipment shall be
secured, and the mast placed in a safe position.
(c) Receptacles or racks shall be provided
for drill steel stored on jumbos.
(d) The employer shall be required to provide
and employee shall use a warning system to warn all employees below jumbo decks
before the drilling cycle is started.
(e) Drills on columns shall be anchored
firmly before drilling is started and shall be retightened when necessary
thereafter.
(f) The employer shall
provide mechanical means for lifting drills, roof bolts, mine straps, and other
unwieldy heavy material to the top decks of jumbos over ten feet in
height.
(g) Jumbo decks wide enough
to accommodate two employees and more than ten feet in height shall be provided
with stair or ladder access.
(h) On
jumbo decks over ten feet in height, standard guardrails, which may be
removable shall be provided on all sides and back platforms.
(i) Scaling bars shall be in good condition
at all times, and blunted and severely worn bars shall not be used.
(j) When jumbos are being moved, only the
driver and those assisting the driver shall be permitted on the
jumbo.
(k) Before commencing the
drill cycle, the face and lifters shall be examined for misfires (residual
explosives) and, if found, they shall be removed before drilling commences at
the face. Lifters shall not be drilled through blasted rock (muck) or
water.
(l) Air lines that are
buried in the invert shall be identified by signs posted nearby, warning all
personnel.
(9) Blasting.
(a) All blasting and explosives-handling
operations shall be conducted in compliance with rule
4123:1-3-15
of the Administrative Code.
(b)
When using explosives in tunnels, shafts and caissons, all metal pipes, rails,
air locks, and steel tunnel lining shall be electricity bonded together and
grounded at or near the portal or shaft, and such pipes and rails shall be
cross-bonded together at no less than one-thousand-foot intervals throughout
the length of the tunnel. In addition, each low air supply shall be grounded at
its delivery end.
(10)
Haulage.
(a) Powered mobile equipment shall
be provided with adequate brakes.
(b) Powered mobile haulage equipment shall be
provided with audible warning devices. Lights shall be provided at both
ends.
(c) Cab windows shall be of
safety glass, or equivalent material in good condition.
(d) Adequate backstops or brakes shall be
installed on inclined conveyor drive units. A conveyor of such type which would
cause injury when run in reverse shall not be reversed until employees in the
area are alerted by a signal or by a designated person that the conveyor is
about to start.
(e) No employees
shall be permitted to ride a power-driven chain, belt, or bucket conveyor,
unless the conveyor is specifically designed for the transportation of
employees.
(f) The employer shall
not permit employees to be transported in dippers, shovel buckets, forks,
clamshells, or in the beds of the dump trucks, or on other haulage equipment
not specifically designed or adapted for the transportation of
employees.
(g) Electrically powered
mobile equipment shall not be left unattended unless the master switch is in
the off position, all operations controls are in the neutral position, and the
brakes are set, or other equivalent precautions are taken against
rolling.
(h) When dumping cars by
hand, the car dumps shall be provided with tie-down chains or bumper blocks to
prevent cars from overturning.
(i)
Rocker-bottom or bottom-dump cars shall be equipped with positive locking
devices.
(j) Equipment which is to
be hauled shall be so loaded and protected as to prevent sliding or
spillage.
(k) Parked railcars shall
be blocked securely.
(l) Berms,
bumper blocks, safety hooks, or similar means shall be provided to prevent
over-travel and overturning at dumping locations.
(m) Where necessary, bumper blocks, or the
equivalent, shall be provided at all track dead ends.
(n) Supplies, materials, and tools, other
than small handtools, shall not be transported with employees in mantrip
cars.
(11) Electrical
equipment.
Oil-filled transformers shall not be used underground unless
they are located in a fire-resistant enclosure and surrounded by a dike to
contain contents of the transformers in event of a rupture.
(12) Hoisting.
(a) Hoisting machines, either powered or hand
operated, shall be worm-geared or powered both ways. The design must be such
that when the power is stopped, the load cannot move.
(b) Controls for powered hoists shall be of
the deadman type with a nonlocking switch or control.
(c) A device to shut off the power shall be
installed ahead of the operating control.
(d) Hand-operated release mechanisms, which
can permit the load to descend faster than the speed rating, may be performed
if shaft conditions permit.
(e)
Hoist machines with cast metal parts shall not be used.
(f) Every hoist shall be tested with twice
the maximum load before being put into operation, and annually thereafter
as well as when repairs or alteration are made. Records
of inspection must be kept on file.
(g) All anchorages of hoists shall be
inspected at the beginning of each shift.
(h) An enclosed covered metal cage shall be
used to raise and lower employees in the shaft. The cage shall be designed with
a safety factor of four and shall be load-tested prior to use. The exterior of
the cage shall be free of projections or sharp corners. Only closed shackles
shall be used in the cage rigging.
(i) If the cage is equipped with a door, a
locking device shall be installed to prevent the door from opening accidentally
while the cage is being lowered or raised while hoisting or lowering employees.
(E) Caissons.
(1) Sinking of caissons.
(a) Bracing of caissons.
Caissons shall be substantially braced before loading with
concrete or other weight.
(b) Concreting caissons.
When two or more caissons are sunk together, employees shall be
removed from adjacent caissons during concreting operations.
(c) Air lock platforms.
All outside air locks shall be provided with a platform no less
than forty-two inches wide, and such platform shall be provided with a standard
guard railing and toeboard.
(d) Fifteen or more employees - two locks.
All caissons in compressed air environments in which there are
fifteen or more employees, or are ten feet or more in diameter, shall have two
locks, one of which shall be used as a manlock. It shall be the duty of one or
more trained employees to be in charge of and operate said manlock and any
associated man shafts.
(e)
Door opening of locks.
The bottom of the lowest door opening of locks shall be no less
than three feet above water level.
(2) Where the working chamber is less than
eleven feet in length, and the caisson is at any time suspended or hung while
work is in progress so that the bottom of the excavation is more than nine feet
below the deck of the working chamber, a shield shall be erected therein for
the protection of the employees.
(3) Shafting shall be subjected to a
hydrostatic or air-pressure test, at which pressure such shafting shall be
tight. Shafting shall be stamped on the outside shell about twelve inches from
each flange to show the pressure to which it has been subjected.
(4) Whenever shafting is used, it shall be
provided, where space permits, with a safe, proper, and suitable staircase for
its entire length, including landing platforms, no more than twenty feet apart.
Where this is impracticable, suitable ladders shall be installed with landing
platforms located about twenty feet apart to break the climb.
(5) All caissons having diameter or side
greater than ten feet shall be provided with a manlock and shafting for the
exclusive use of employees.
(6) In
addition to the gauge in the locks, gauges shall also be maintained on the
outer and inner side of each bulkhead. These gauges shall be accessible at all
times and kept in accurate working order.
(7) Where employees are exposed to compressed
air working environments in caissons the requirements contained in paragraph
(G) of this rule shall be complied with.
(F) Cofferdams.
(1) If overtopping of the cofferdam by high
waters is possible, means shall be provided for controlled flooding of the work
area.
(2) Warning signals for
evacuations of employees in case of emergency shall be developed and
instructions posted.
(3) Cofferdam
walkways, bridges, or ramps with no less than two means of rapid exit shall be
provided and equipped with standard guardrails.
(4) Cofferdams located close to navigable
shipping channels shall be appropriately marked to protect them from vessels in
transit.
(G) Compressed
air.
(1) General provision.
When work is in progress which requires employees to work in
compressed air, there shall be present a representative of the employer, who is
thoroughly trained and experienced in compressed air techniques.
(2) Medical attendance,
examination and regulations.
(a) A licensed
physician shall be designated for each job who is knowledgeable of compressed
air work, who shall at all times be available for immediate service and who
shall be responsible for all matters on the job pertaining to the health of
employees, treatment on the job of illness and injuries, and medical and first
aid equipment. The physician shall make all required physical examinations and
shall make and sign all required reports of such examinations.
(b) No employee shall be assigned to work in
a compressed air environment until examined by the physician and reported to be
physically qualified to engage in such work.
(c) After being employed continuously in
compressed air work for a period designated by the physician, but not to exceed
one year, the employee shall be reexamined by the physician to determine if
such employee is still physically qualified to engage in compressed air
work.
(d) An ambulance or
transportation suitable for a litter case shall be provided at each project and
at each portal of a project when the portals are more than five road miles
apart.
(e) A medical lock shall be
established and maintained in immediate working order whenever air pressure in
the working chamber is increased above the normal atmosphere.
(f) Identification badges shall be furnished
to all employees, indicating that the wearer is a compressed air worker. A
permanent record shall be kept of all identification badges issued. The badge
shall give the employee's name, address of the medical lock, the telephone
number of the licensed physician for the compressed air project and contain
instructions that in case of emergency of unknown or doubtful cause of illness,
the wearer shall be rushed to the medical lock. The employer shall advise the
employee to wear the badge at all times, off the job as well as on the
job.
(3) Telephone and
signal communication.
Effective and reliable means of communication, such as bells,
whistles, or telephones, shall be maintained at all times between all the
following locations:
(a) The working
chamber face;
(b) The working
chamber side of the manlock near the door;
(c) The interior of the manlock;
(d) The lock attendant's station;
(e) The compressor plant;
(f) The medical lock;
(g) The emergency lock (if one is required);
and
(h) The special decompression
chamber (if one is required).
(4) Signs and records.
(a) The time of decompression shall be posted
in each manlock as follows:
"Time of Decompression for this Lock"
................ pounds to ................ pounds in
..................... minutes.
................ pounds to ................ pounds in
..................... minutes.
(Signed by) ______________________________________
(Superintendent)
This form shall be posted in the manlock at all times.
(b) Any code of signals used shall
be conspicuously posted near workplace entrances and such other locations as
may be necessary to bring them to the attention of all employees
concerned.
(c) For each eight-hour
shift, a record of employees employed under air pressure shall be kept by
another employee who shall remain outside the lock near the entrance. This
record shall show the period each employee spends in the air chamber and the
time taken for decompression. A copy shall be submitted to the appointed
physician after each shift.
(5) Compression.
(a) During the compression of employees, the
pressure shall not be increased to more than three pounds per square inch gauge
(p.s.i.g.) within the first minute. The pressure shall be held at three
p.s.i.g. and again at seven p.s.i.g. sufficiently long to determine if any
employees are experiencing discomfort.
(b) After holding at seven p.s.i.g. the
pressure shall be raised uniformly and at a rate not to exceed ten pounds per
square inch (p.s.i.) per minute.
(c) If any employee complains of discomfort,
the pressure shall be held to determined if the symptoms are relieved. If,
after five minutes the discomfort does not disappear, the lock attendant shall
gradually reduce the pressure until the employee signals that the discomfort
has ceased. If he does not indicate that the discomfort has disappeared, the
lock attendant shall reduce the pressure to atmospheric and the employee shall
be released from the lock.
(d) No
employee shall be subjected to pressure exceeding fifty pounds per square inch
except in emergency.
(6)
Decompression.
(a) Decompression to normal
condition shall be in accordance with the decompression tables in the appendix
to this rule.
(b) Except in
emergencies no employee working in compressed air shall be permitted to pass
from the place in which the work is being done to normal air pressure except
after decompression in accordance with the decompression tables in the appendix
to this rule.
(7)
Compressor plant and air supply.
(a) At all
times there shall be a thoroughly experienced, competent, and reliable person,
designated by the employer, on duty at the air control valves as a gauge tender
who shall regulate the pressure in the working areas. During tunneling
operations, one gauge tender may regulate the pressure in no more than two
headings; provided, that the gauge and controls are all in one location. In
caisson work, there shall be a gauge tender for each caisson.
(b) The low air compressor plant shall be of
sufficient capacity to not only permit the work to be done safely, but shall
also provide a margin to meet emergencies and repairs.
(c) Low air compressor units shall have no
less than two independent and separate sources of power supply and each shall
be capable of operating the entire low air plant and its accessory
systems.
(d) All high-and
low-pressure air supply lines shall be equipped with check valves.
(e) Low-pressure air shall be regulated
automatically. In addition, manually operated valves shall be provided for
emergency conditions.
(f) The air
intakes for all air compressors shall be located at a place where fumes,
exhaust gases, and other air contaminants will be at a minimum.
(g) Gauges indicating the pressure in the
working chamber shall be installed in the compressor building, the lock
attendant's station, and at the employer's field office.
(8) Ventilation and air quality.
(a) Exhaust valves and exhaust pipes shall be
provided and operated so that the working chamber shall be well ventilated, and
there shall be no pockets of dead air.
(b) The air in the workplace shall be
analyzed by the employer no less than once each shift, and records of such
tests shall be kept on file at the place where the work is in progress. The
test results shall be within
established, recognized occupational exposure
limits. If these limits are not met, immediate action to correct the
situation shall be taken by the employer.
(c) The temperature of all working chambers
which are subjected to air pressure shall be maintained at a temperature not to
exceed eighty-five degrees Fahrenheit.
(9) Electricity.
(a) All lighting in compressed air chambers
shall be by electricity exclusively, and two independent electric lighting
systems with independent sources of supply shall be used. The emergency source
shall be arranged to become automatically operative in the event of failure of
the regularly used source.
(b) The
minimum intensity of light of any walkway, ladder, stairway, or working level
shall be no less than ten lumens, and in all workplaces the lighting shall at
all times be such as to enable employees to see clearly.
(c) All electrical equipment, and wiring for
light and power circuits, shall be suitable for use in damp, hazardous, high
temperature, and compressed air environments.
(d) External parts of lighting fixtures and
all other electrical equipment, when within eight feet of the floor, shall be
constructed of noncombustible, nonabsorptive, insulating materials, except that
metal may be used if it is effectively grounded.
(e) Portable lamps shall be equipped with
noncombustible, nonabsorptive, insulating sockets, approved handles, basket
guards, and approved cords.
(f) The
use of worn or defective portable and pendant conductors is
prohibited.
(10) Fire
prevention and protection.
(a) Firefighting
equipment shall be available at all times and shall be maintained in working
condition.
(b) While welding or
flame-cutting is being done in compressed air, an employee with a fire hose or
approved extinguisher shall stand by until such operation is
completed.
(c) Shafts and caissons
containing flammable material of any kind, either above or below ground, shall
be provided with a waterline and a fire hose connected thereto, so arranged
that all points of the shaft or caisson are within reach of the hose
stream.
(d) Fire hose shall be no
less than one and one-half inches in nominal diameter; the water pressure shall
at all times be adequate for efficient operation of the type of nozzle used;
and the water supply shall be such as to ensure an uninterrupted flow. Fire
hose, when not in use, shall be located or guarded to prevent damage thereto.
(e) The power house, compressor
house, and all buildings housing ventilating equipment, shall be provided with
at least one hose connection in the waterline, with a fire hose connected
thereto. A fire hose shall be maintained within reach of structures wood over
or near shafts.
(f) Tunnels shall
be provided with a two-inch minimum diameter waterline extending into the
working chamber and to within one hundred feet of the working face. Such line
shall have hose outlets with one hundred feet of fire hose attached and
maintained as follows: one at the working face; one immediately inside of the
bulkhead of the working chamber; and one immediately outside such bulkhead. In
addition, hose outlets shall be provided at two-hundred-foot intervals
throughout the length of the tunnel, and one hundred feet of fire hose shall be
attached to the outlet nearest to any location where flammable materials is
being kept or stored or where any flame is being used.
(g) In addition to fire hose protection
required by this section, on every floor of every building not under compressed
air, but used in connection with the compressed air work, there shall be
provided at least one approved fire extinguisher of the proper type for the
hazard involved. At least two approved fire extinguishers shall be provided in
the working chamber as follows: one at the working face and one immediately
outside the bulkhead (pressure side). Extinguishers in the working chamber
shall use water as the primary extinguishing agent and shall not use any
extinguishing agent which could be harmful to the employees in the working
chamber. The fire extinguishers shall be protected from damage.
(h) Highly combustible materials shall not be
used or stored in the working chamber. Wood, paper, and similar combustible
material shall not be used in the working chamber in quantities which could
cause a fire hazard. The compressor building shall be constructed of
noncombustible material.
(i)
Manlocks shall be equipped with a manual type fire extinguisher system that can
be activated inside the manlock and also by the outside lock attendant. In
addition, a fire hose and portable fire extinguisher shall be provided inside
and outside the manlock. The portable fire extinguisher shall be the dry
chemical type.
(j) Equipment,
fixtures, and furniture in manlocks and special decompression chambers shall be
constructed of noncombustible material. Bedding, etc., shall be chemically
treated so as to be fire resistant.
(k) Head frames shall be constructed of
structural steel or open frame-work fire-proofed timber. Head houses and other
temporary surface buildings or structures within one hundred feet of the shaft,
caisson, or tunnel opening shall be built of fire-resistant
materials.
(l) No oil, gasoline, or
other combustible material shall be stored within one hundred feet on any
shaft, caisson, or tunnel opening, except that oils may be stored in suitable
tanks in isolated fireproof buildings, provided such buildings are no less than
fifty feet from any shaft, caisson, or tunnel opening, or any building directly
connected thereto.
(m) Leaking
flammable liquids shall be prevented from flowing into the areas specifically
mentioned in the preceding paragraph.
(n) All explosives used in connection with
compressed air work shall be selected, stored, transported, and used as
specified in rule
4123:1-3-15
of the Administrative Code.
(11) Bulkheads and safety screens.
(a) Intermediate bulkheads with locks, or
intermediate safety screens or both, are required where there is the danger of
rapid flooding.
(b) In tunnels
sixteen feet or more in diameter, hanging walkways shall be provided from the
face to the manlock as high in the tunnel as practicable, with no less than six
feet of head room. Walkways shall be constructed of noncombustible material.
Standard railings shall be securely installed throughout the length of all
walkways on open sides in accordance with rule
4123:1-3-04
of the Administrative Code. Where walkways are ramped under safety screens, the
walkway surface shall be skidproofed by cleats or by equivalent
means.
(c) Bulkheads used to
contain compressed air shall be tested, where practicable, to prove their
ability to resist the highest air pressure which may be used.
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