105,313Records 71,083Employers 85,290Hospitalizations 27,770Amputations 2015-01-01 2025-10-31
Safety Incidents OSHA Severe Injury Reports · 2015–2025

OSHA Accident Investigation · Summary #14347041

ELECTRICAL,ELECTROCUTED,WELDER,WELDING,E C,WELDING ELECTRODE,ARC WELDING

Event
ELECTRICAL,ELECTROCUTED,WELDER,WELDING,E C,WELDING ELECTRODE,ARC WELDING
Linked inspection
No inspection record linked to this accident's victims.
Summary number
14347041
Report ID
420600

Event description

POSSIBLE ELECTRIC SHOCK - FAULTY WELDING ELECTRODE HANDLE

Investigation abstract

THERE WERE NO EYEWITNESSES TO THE ACCIDENT, AND THE CIRCUMSTANCES OF THE ACCIDEN HE LADDER. THE WELDER WAS STILL ON. THE WORK LEAD HOLDER WAS FOUND IN DISREPAIR, AND ITS HANDLE COULD BE MOVED SO AS TO EXPOSE THE ENERGIZED PARTS OF THE LEAD. THE MEDICAL EXAMINER FOUND NO ELECTRICAL BURNS ON THE BODY AND NO EVIDENCE OF EL ECTROCUTION ON THE CLOTHES. HOWEVER, THE EXAMINER DID INDICATE THAT, WITH "LOW V OLTAGE" ELECTROCUTION, THERE IS NOT ALWAYS EVIDENCE OF SUCH BURNS. A FEW SCRAPES AND SCRATCHES WERE FOUND, INDICATING THAT THE EMPLOYEE FELL; BUT THESE INJURIES WERE NOT THE CAUSE OF HIS DEATH. T ARE BASED UPON INTERVIEWS WITH VARIOUS PEOPLE. AN EMPLOYEE WAS REINFORCING THE WELDS ON THE CORNERS OF A TARP RACK ON A STEEL TRUCK. HE WAS WORKING ALONE USIN G A LINCOLN ARC WELDER (MODEL NUMBER AC-225-S). THE GROUND LEAD FROM THE WELDER WAS ATTACHED NEAR THE CENTER OF THE TARP RACK BAR. AN ALUMINUM LADDER WAS FOUND LYING NEAR HIS FEET; AND HE HAD PRESUMABLY BEEN WELDING, STANDING ON THE LADDER AS IT LEANED AGAINST THE TARP RACK BAR. THE EMPLOYEE WAS FOUND LYING ON THE CONC RETE BY THE REAR TIRES OF THE TRUCK. THE LADDER WAS LYING NEAR HIS FEET, AND THE WORK LEAD CABLE WAS LYING ACROSS HIS MIDSECTION THEN FED THROUGH THE RUNGS OF T

Victim

  1. #1 Fatality Age 60 M

    Nature of injury
    10
    Part of body
    4
    Event type
    13
    Source
    15
    Occupation code
    999
    Human factor
    12
    Environmental factor
    18
    Task assigned
    1

Codes shown verbatim from OSHA's accident-investigation database. A human-readable decoder is coming in a future release once the accident_lookup2 dictionary is loaded.