Abrasive Wheels Equipment and grinding equipment.
Guide to equipment that reduces work-at-height risks in Irish workplaces. Learn about trolleys, hoists, grinding equipment, and mechanical assistance that protect workers from injury.
The best lift is no lift at all.
powered grinding equipment (angle grinders, bench grinders, pedestal grinders, cut-off saws) are the most effective way to reduce abrasive wheel injuries across Irish workplaces.
- Principles of equipment use in course
- Covers warehouse, healthcare and manufacturing
- Meets Irish employer duty of care
Protect workers with the right lifting aid.
powered grinding equipment (angle grinders, bench grinders, pedestal grinders, cut-off saws) and handling equipment are the most effective way to reduce abrasive wheel injuries. Where equipment can do the lifting, human bodies are protected - and productivity often improves too.
Under Irish health and safety regulations, employers must avoid the need for hazardous Abrasive Wheels where reasonably practicable. Providing appropriate grinding equipment and handling equipment is a key way to meet this duty and keep teams safe across every Irish sector.
This guide covers the most common pieces of Abrasive Wheels Equipment used in Ireland - from platform trolleys and bench or pedestal grinders to patient hoists and slide sheets - and the principles for choosing the right tool for the task.
Common Abrasive Wheels Equipment.
These tools and aids reduce the need for manual lifting and lower the risk of workplace injury across Ireland.
Platform Trolleys
Flat platform on wheels for moving boxes, pallets, and multiple items at once. Uses: warehouse, retail, office.
Sack Trucks
Two-wheeled L-shaped trolleys for moving heavy boxes and sacks on edge. Uses: deliveries, stock handling.
bench or pedestal grinders
Manual or powered trucks for moving loaded pallets in warehouses. Uses: warehouse, logistics.
Patient Hoists
Mechanical lifts for transferring patients safely in healthcare settings. Uses: hospitals, care homes.
Scissor Lifts
Platforms that raise loads to working height, reducing bending. Uses: manufacturing, assembly.
Vacuum Lifters
Suction-based lifters for smooth, flat loads like glass and sheet materials. Uses: construction, manufacturing.
Conveyor Systems
Belt or roller systems that move goods without lifting. Uses: production lines, sorting.
Lifting Straps
Straps that improve grip and distribute load when team-based height work. Uses: moving large items.
Slide Sheets
Low-friction sheets for repositioning patients without lifting. Uses: healthcare, care homes.
Why equipment matters in every Irish workplace
powered grinding equipment (angle grinders, bench grinders, pedestal grinders, cut-off saws) and handling equipment are the most effective way to reduce abrasive wheel injuries. Where equipment can do the lifting, human bodies are protected. From a busy Dublin warehouse to a Cork care home, the right aid at the right moment prevents years of fall-related injury.
Under Irish health and safety regulations, employers must avoid the need for hazardous Abrasive Wheels where reasonably practicable. Providing appropriate equipment is a key way to meet this duty.
The best lift is no lift at all. Always ask: is there equipment available that could do this task more safely?
Selecting the right equipment
When choosing handling equipment, consider:
- Task requirements - What needs to be moved and where?
- Load characteristics - Weight, size, shape, fragility
- Environment - Space available, floor surfaces, obstacles
- Frequency - How often the task is performed
- User capability - Training needed, physical demands
Employee responsibilities
Workers play a critical role in making equipment effective. Every employee should:
- Use equipment provided for work-at-height tasks
- Report equipment that is damaged or not working
- Request equipment if tasks feel unsafe without it
- Follow training on correct equipment use
- Not bypass equipment to "save time"
Equipment training and supervision
Providing equipment is only half the solution. Irish employers must also train staff in its correct use. Our Abrasive Wheels Course covers the principles of using powered grinding equipment (angle grinders, bench grinders, pedestal grinders, cut-off saws) safely. Specific operator training - for example forklift or overhead crane use - is provided separately by accredited specialist trainers.
Maintenance and inspection
grinding equipment must be inspected regularly and maintained in good working order. Damaged trolleys, frayed lifting straps, or poorly serviced hoists become hazards themselves. A clear reporting system ensures faults are fixed quickly and equipment remains safe to use.
Equipment and lifting aid questions.
Answers to the most common questions about Abrasive Wheels Equipment in Irish workplaces.
Does the Abrasive Wheels Course cover equipment use?
Can I refuse to lift if equipment is not provided?
Who is responsible for providing equipment?
What types of grinding equipment are used in Irish workplaces?
Are powered grinding equipment (angle grinders, bench grinders, pedestal grinders, cut-off saws) mandatory under Irish law?
Learn equipment principles in our Abrasive Wheels Course.
Our HSA compliant course covers safe use of powered grinding equipment (angle grinders, bench grinders, pedestal grinders, cut-off saws) as part of comprehensive Abrasive Wheels Training. Complete online in 60 minutes and receive your certificate instantly.
Explore more Abrasive Wheels resources.
Continue learning with related guides on training, risk, and workplace safety.
Abrasive Wheels Training, everywhere you work.
One HSA compliant, QQI aligned, CPD and RoSPA approved Abrasive Wheels Course - delivered online to every Irish city, every industry and every role. Instant Abrasive Wheels Certificate on passing, valid for 3 years nationwide.
Renewing? Use our fast Abrasive Wheels Refresher. Looking for formally recognised training? See our Abrasive Wheels QQI page. Need the basics first? Start with what Abrasive Wheels actually is and the risk assessment for abrasive wheels.
Find your city
Every major Irish city has its own dedicated Abrasive Wheels Course page - same HSA compliant training, tuned to your local workforce.
Find your industry
Eight sector variants, from healthcare to farming, with real Irish workplace scenarios specific to your day-to-day.
Healthcare & HSE
Nurses, care assistants, porters, paramedics and home carers across every Irish health service.
Warehousing & logistics
Pickers, packers, forklift operators, couriers and distribution centre staff lifting daily.
Retail & supermarkets
Shop floor teams, stockroom workers and delivery drivers in stores and shopping centres.
Construction & trades
Labourers, carpenters, electricians, plumbers and plant operators on every Irish site.
Manufacturing
Production line, assembly, quality control and maintenance in pharma, food and medtech.
Hospitality & catering
Kitchen, housekeeping, maintenance and event teams across hotels and venues.
Office & administration
Office teams handling deliveries, IT equipment, file boxes and furniture moves.
Agriculture & farming
Farm workers, livestock handlers, agricultural contractors and seasonal crews.
Every Abrasive Wheels resource
Training, certification, refresher, online delivery and specialist guides - one accredited Irish platform, one consistent standard.
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