zog
Senior Member
- Location
- Charlotte, NC
Zog,
Besides the gloves, face protection. I am not brave, but I am experienced. I did not start out as an Inspector. It is very difficult to inspect when denergized here unless I go in at midnight. I am sure Brian possibly would agree. New work is different. I do not know what else to say to answer your question besides this is DC.
This is DC as in Direct Current or this is in DC as in the equipment is in Washington DC?
Either way, a facesheild and some rubber gloves are not enough, sorry to say this but it dosent seem like you are aware of the OSHA and NFPA 70E rules for when you can work on eenergized equipment and when you can justify it what PPE is necessary. I do acceptance testing all the time, that is new work, I also run into inspectors every day that dont know the first thing about 70E (I am sure Brian will agree with me on that one), not thier fault, they just havent been trained properly and when they were something else before they were inspectors these 70E rules were in thier infancy and very few knew anything about them.
Experience dosent make you safe, in fact more often than not it can get you in a world of trouble. I highly recommend you get some safety training.