Eyes are the body part most often hurt by abrasive wheels. Grit, sparks, wheel fragments and dust all travel fast and far, and a single fragment can end someone sight. The fix is simple and cheap, which makes eye injuries some of the most preventable of all.
This guide explains what causes Eye Injuries, what it does to people, and the exact controls that stop it, written for Irish workplaces and aligned with HSA guidance.
What causes Eye Injuries
The usual cause is flying grit, swarf, wheel fragments and dust striking unprotected or poorly protected eyes. Understanding the cause is the first step to controlling it, because almost every case traces back to a missed check or a wrong choice that training is designed to prevent.
The consequences
Left uncontrolled, the result is corneal abrasions, embedded fragments, infection and permanent loss of vision. These are not abstract risks; they are the injuries that fill HSA incident reports every year.
How to control Eye Injuries
The control measures are clear: always wear rated eye protection, add a full face shield for cutting and overhead work, keep bystanders clear, and use screens on fixed machines. Record them in your abrasive wheels hazard assessment and confirm operators are trained and authorised.
PPE and the safe system of work
For this hazard the PPE is wrap-around impact goggles to EN 166 with a face shield for higher-energy tasks. PPE supports, but never replaces, the controls above. The full method is taught in our Abrasive Wheels Training.
The law behind Eye Injuries
In Ireland, Eye Injuries sits inside a clear legal framework. The Safety, Health and Welfare at Work (General Application)(Amendment) Regulations 2016, known as SI 36/2016, require employers to provide adequate information, instruction and training to anyone who mounts, dresses or operates an abrasive wheel. That duty is the legal root of every certificate connected to Eye Injuries.
The regulations also demand that work equipment is suitable, inspected at suitable intervals by a competent person, and used only by people who are properly trained and authorised in writing. The Health and Safety Authority enforces these duties and checks training records on routine and reactive site visits, so anyone involved in Eye Injuries should expect to evidence a current certificate.
Where Eye Injuries is carried out without that training in place, an HSA inspector can issue an improvement or prohibition notice on the day, insurers may refuse a claim, and the employer can face prosecution. Treating Eye Injuries as a documented, trained activity is the simplest way to stay compliant and keep work moving.
What the Abrasive Wheels Course covers
The HSA-compliant Abrasive Wheels Course follows the standard Irish module structure, recognised by RoSPA, CPD certified and QQI aligned:
- Wheel types and marking - bonded and coated wheels, decoding the ISO 525 marking and reading the maximum operating speed.
- Wheel selection - matching grit, bond and wheel type to the material and the machine so the wheel is never over-speeded.
- Pre-use inspection - visual checks, the ring test for vitrified wheels and expiry checks on resin-bonded discs.
- Mounting - correct flanges, blotters, spindle fit and torque, with no force-fitting.
- Guarding and PPE - guard coverage, eye, face, respiratory, hearing and hand protection.
- Safe operating technique - body position, kickback avoidance and never side-loading a cutting disc.
- Storage and handling - racking, segregation from damp and chemicals and stock rotation by expiry.
- Emergency response - what to do after a wheel break, an eye injury or dust inhalation.
- Risk assessment - writing an assessment that survives an HSA inspection.
The course finishes with an assessment, and a pass produces an instant, downloadable HSA-compliant Abrasive Wheels Certificate valid for three years.
How to get certified in three steps
Getting compliant is quick and there is no paperwork to post:
- Enrol on the Abrasive Wheels Course for EUR 35 per learner.
- Work through the modules at your own pace on any phone, tablet or laptop - the average completion time is about 55 minutes.
- Pass the assessment and download your HSA-compliant certificate immediately.
Irish Abrasive Wheels is trusted by over 50,000 operators and employers nationwide. The training is CPD certified, RoSPA approved, QQI aligned and fully HSA compliant under the Safety, Health and Welfare at Work (General Application)(Amendment) Regulations 2016. Need to certify a group? The team training portal offers bulk pricing and a single dashboard to track every pass and renewal.
Frequently asked questions
What causes Eye Injuries?
Flying grit, swarf, wheel fragments and dust striking unprotected or poorly protected eyes.
How do you prevent Eye Injuries?
Always wear rated eye protection, add a full face shield for cutting and overhead work, keep bystanders clear, and use screens on fixed machines.
Is Eye Injuries covered in Abrasive Wheels Training?
Yes. Eye Injuries and its controls are a core part of the HSA-compliant Abrasive Wheels Course, which operators can complete online in about 60 minutes for EUR 35.
Related Abrasive Wheels guides
- Abrasive Wheels Hazard Assessment
- Injury Prevention
- Employee Guide
- Abrasive Wheels FAQs
- Abrasive Wheels Certificate
- Same-Day Abrasive Wheels Certificate
- Abrasive Wheel Mounting
Get your Abrasive Wheels Certificate online
Need a certificate before your next shift? Complete the Abrasive Wheels Course Online Ireland for EUR 35. The HSA-compliant, QQI-aligned course finishes in about an hour on any device and your certificate downloads the moment you pass. Training a team? Use our team training portal for bulk pricing and a single records dashboard.