Course Content
Introduction to Hand Safety
An overview of basic hand safety principles for offshore mechanical and maintenance crews. Includes common injuries, PPE usage, and essential safety behaviors.
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Tool Identification & Correct Usage
Identifying basic hand tools and understanding correct usage to prevent damage, injury, and incorrect mechanical outcomes.
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Tool Inspection & Pre-Use Checks
Identifying tool defects, wear, and unsafe conditions before use. Ensures crew members understand how to inspect tools and prevent equipment damage or personal injury.
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Safe Working Practices
Covers essential safe work techniques for using hand tools in offshore environments, including body mechanics, tool control, and working in hazardous or confined spaces.
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Hazard Awareness & Risk Control
Identifying tool-related hazards, understanding stored energy risks, spark and heat considerations, and performing proper risk assessments before work.
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Practical Scenario Exercises
Realistic offshore maintenance scenarios designed to reinforce correct tool use, hand safety, inspection steps, and safe working practices.
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Final Assessment – Basic Tools and Hand Safety
Complete the quiz.
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Basic Tools and Hand Safety

PPE – Gloves, Eye Protection, and Body Positioning

Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) is a critical part of offshore safety, especially during mechanical tasks involving hand tools. Correct glove selection, eye protection, and proper body positioning significantly reduce injury risk.

1. Gloves: Your First Line of Defense

Offshore tasks expose hands to:

  • Cuts and abrasions
  • Impact from tools and moving parts
  • Heat or friction
  • Oil, grease, and chemicals

Types of gloves and when to use them:

• Impact Protection Gloves

Use during heavy mechanical work, hammering, moving equipment, or lifting.

• Cut-Resistant Gloves

Use when handling metal edges, tools with sharp surfaces, wire ropes, or cutting tools.

• Oil-Resistant / Nitrile Gloves

Use during hydraulic work, hose handling, and exposure to oil or grease.

• When not to wear gloves

  • While operating rotating equipment
  • When gloves may get caught on moving machinery
  • When performing precision tasks that require feel and dexterity

2. Eye Protection

Eye injuries offshore often occur from:

  • Flying particles during hammer work
  • Rust flakes
  • Metal fragments
  • Chemical splashes
  • Pressurized leaks from hoses

Always wear:

  • Safety glasses (minimum)
  • Goggles when handling chemicals or grinding
  • Face shield for high-risk impact tasks

A split-second without eye protection can cause permanent vision loss.

3. Body Positioning

Correct body positioning is essential for preventing:

  • Tool slippage injuries
  • Back strain
  • Loss of balance
  • Line-of-fire impact injuries

Best practices:

  • Keep hands outside the line-of-fire
  • Maintain stable footing, especially on wet decks
  • Use your body weight, not just arm strength
  • Never place your face or torso behind a tool that could slip
  • Keep elbows close to the body for stability

4. Line-of-Fire Awareness

This means recognizing:

  • Where the tool will go if it slips
  • Where your hands will go if the load shifts
  • Where moving components may strike

If your hands or body are in the potential path of movement, reposition before continuing.

Key Learning Points

At the end of this lesson, the trainee should understand:

  • Correct glove selection
  • When gloves are a hazard
  • Proper eye protection for different tasks
  • How to position the body safely
  • How to avoid line-of-fire injuries