ROA/Ancillary/TBT-ROA-010
Joint Cutting and Sealing
Road Construction & Surfacing › Ancillary › Joint Cutting and Sealing
Joint Cutting and Sealing
Toolbox Talk Record
Ref: TBT-ROA-010 | Issue: 1 | Date: March 2026
| Presenter | Project | ||
| Location | Date |
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 dust | Cutting concrete generates respirable crystalline silica dust that causes silicosis, lung cancer, and COPD. |
| Severe laceration | Diamond saw blades rotating at high speed amputate fingers and hands on contact in a fraction of a second. |
| Burn risk | Hot-pour sealant at 190°C causes instant severe burns; it sticks to skin prolonging the injury. |
| Do | Don't |
|
See also: Road Construction Safety Awareness | Respirable Crystalline Silica (RCS) |
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