ROA/Ancillary/TBT-ROA-010

Joint Cutting and Sealing

Road Construction & SurfacingAncillaryJoint Cutting and Sealing

Joint Cutting and Sealing

Toolbox Talk Record

Ref: TBT-ROA-010  |  Issue: 1  |  Date: March 2026
PresenterProject
LocationDate

What?

  • Joint cutting forms controlled cracks in concrete roads and pavements to prevent random shrinkage cracking.
  • Diamond-bladed floor saws are used to cut joints at specified depths and spacings in the concrete surface.
  • Joint cutting generates high levels of silica dust from the concrete and significant noise from the saw.
  • Water-cooled cutting reduces dust but creates silica-laden slurry that must be contained and disposed of.
  • Hot-pour sealant is applied at temperatures around 190°C into the finished joint to prevent water ingress.
  • Joint sealant fume contains hydrocarbons that irritate the respiratory tract and require ventilation control.
  • Timing of joint cutting is critical; too early damages the concrete, too late allows random cracking.
  • The floor saw blade rotates at high speed; contact causes instant severe laceration and amputation.
  • Working on live carriageways during joint cutting requires full traffic management protection.
  • COSHH 2002, the Control of Noise at Work Regulations 2005, and PUWER 1998 all apply.

Why?

Silica dustCutting concrete generates respirable crystalline silica dust that causes silicosis, lung cancer, and COPD.
Severe lacerationDiamond saw blades rotating at high speed amputate fingers and hands on contact in a fraction of a second.
Burn riskHot-pour sealant at 190°C causes instant severe burns; it sticks to skin prolonging the injury.
Do Don't
  • Use water cooling on the saw blade to suppress silica dust during cutting.
  • Contain and dispose of cutting slurry properly; do not allow it to enter drains.
  • Wear hearing protection, eye protection, and RPE during all cutting operations.
  • Keep hands and body clear of the rotating diamond saw blade at all times.
  • Wear thermal gloves and face protection when handling hot-pour sealant.
  • Set up traffic management before cutting or sealing joints on live roads.
  • Cut joints at the time specified by the concrete mix designer to prevent cracking.
  • Stand upwind of sealant fume and use RPE where ventilation is inadequate.
  • Inspect the floor saw blade, guards, and water supply before each use.
  • Brief the team on the cutting sequence, traffic plan, and burn first aid.
  • DON'T cut concrete without water suppression to control silica dust generation.
  • DON'T allow silica slurry to enter surface water drains or watercourses.
  • DON'T touch or reach near the rotating diamond saw blade under any circumstances.
  • DON'T handle hot-pour sealant equipment without thermal gloves and face protection.
  • DON'T cut joints too early while concrete is soft or too late after cracking starts.
  • DON'T work on live carriageways without full traffic management protection in place.
  • DON'T remove the saw blade guard for any reason during cutting operations.
  • DON'T inhale sealant fume; stand upwind or use RPE in still conditions.
  • DON'T leave the floor saw running unattended on the concrete surface.
  • DON'T ignore burns from hot sealant; cool with running water for 20 minutes.

See also: Road Construction Safety Awareness | Respirable Crystalline Silica (RCS)

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