- Treat the drive shaft, pipe string, and reception shaft as confined spaces throughout.
- Never position yourself between the jacking rams and the pipe being pushed.
- Monitor the atmosphere in the shaft and pipe string continuously during operations.
- Provide forced ventilation through the pipe string to any workers at the cutting face.
- Monitor ground settlement above the alignment and respond to movement trigger levels.
- Manage the laser guidance beam to prevent eye exposure to workers in the pipeline.
- Clean up bentonite spills in the shaft immediately to prevent dangerously slippery surfaces.
- Use mechanical spoil removal methods where the volume and weight exceed manual handling limits.
- Maintain communication between the shaft top, jacking operator, and workers in the pipe.
- Brief all workers on the jacking sequence, emergency procedures, and rescue plan daily.
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- DON'T enter the shaft or pipe string without a confined space permit and gas monitoring.
- DON'T stand between the jacking frame and the pipe — the crushing force is instantly fatal.
- DON'T work in the shaft or pipe without continuous atmospheric monitoring running.
- DON'T allow workers in the pipe string without ventilation providing fresh air to the face.
- DON'T ignore settlement monitoring readings — investigate trigger level exceedances immediately.
- DON'T look directly into the laser guidance beam — it causes permanent eye damage.
- DON'T leave bentonite spills uncleaned — they create a severe slip hazard in the shaft.
- DON'T manually remove spoil that exceeds safe handling weight — use mechanical methods.
- DON'T lose communication with workers inside the pipe — re-establish contact immediately.
- DON'T skip the daily briefing — pipe jacking hazards change with every metre of progress.
See also: Tunnelling Safety Awareness | Shaft Sinking Safety
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