COPYRIGHT © 2013 SANDVIK MINING AND CONSTRUCTION OY
Page 20 - Operation
Safety
RD2019 A-JAW, D-JAW, S-JAW, M-JAW
REPAIRS AND MAINTENANCE
Do not try to do repairs or any other maintenance work you do not understand.
MODIFICATIONS AND WELDING
Non-approved modifications can cause injury and damage. Contact your local
dealer for advice before modifying the product. Before welding on the product
while it is installed on the carrier, consult your carrier dealer for precautions in
welding.
METAL SPLINTERS
You can be injured by flying splinters when driving metal pins in and out. Use soft-
faced hammer or drifts to remove and fit metal pins, such as pivot pins. Always wear
safety glasses.
LABELS ON THE PRODUCT
Safety labels communicate the following four things:
■
The severity level of the risk (i.e. signal word "DANGER" or "WARNING").
■
The nature of the hazard (i.e. the type of hazard: high pressure, dust, etc.).
■
The consequence of interaction with the hazard.
■
How to avoid the hazard.
You must ALWAYS follow the instructions of the safety messages and symbols of
the product safety labels and the instructions set forth in the manuals to avoid death
or severe injury!
Keep the safety labels clean and visible at all times. Check the condition of safety
labels daily. Safety labels and instructions which have disappeared, been damaged,
painted over, come loose or do not meet the legibility requirements for safe viewing
distance, must be replaced before operating the product.
If a safety label is attached to a part that is replaced, install a new safety label on the
replacement part. If this manual is available in your language, then the safety labels
should be available in the same language.
There are several specific safety labels on this product. Please become familiarized
with all safety labels. The location of the safety labels is shown in the illustration
below.
When you clean the safety labels, use a cloth, water and soap. Do not use solvent,
gasoline or other harsh chemicals to clean the safety labels.
Solvents, gasoline or harsh chemicals could loosen the adhesive that secures the
safety labels. Loose adhesive will allow the safety label to fall.