The effect of feedstock, knife wear and work station on the exposure to noise and vibrations in wood chipping operations
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2018
abstract:
Industrial chipping is becoming increasingly popular, as the result of a growing demand for woody
biomass. Industrial chippers are large, powerful machines that generate much noise and vibration.
This study explored some factors that may affect exposure to noise and vibration, namely:
feedstock type (branches vs. logs), work station characteristics (truck cab vs. separate cab) and
knife wear (new knives vs. blunt knives). Exposure to noise was significantly affected by all three
factors, and it was higher for branch feedstock, separate cabs and blunt knives. The higher exposure
levels recorded for the separate cab were especially insidious, because they were below and above
the hearing threshold and would elude immediate perception. Exposure to whole-body vibration
(WBV) was significantly higher for branch feedstock and for the separate cab. Knife wear seemed
to determine an increase in WBV, but this effect had no statistical significance and the result could
not be taken as conclusive. Among the three factors studied, work station characteristics had the
strongest effect. Further studies may extend the comparison to a wider range of options, as well
as explore the use of exposure variation for machine diagnostics.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
biomass; fuelwood; ergonomics; safety
List of contributors:
Magagnotti, Natascia; Spinelli, Raffaele
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