Designing Effective Machine Safety Signs
When designed and used properly, safety signs can play an important role in risk reduction for employees working with machinery.
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Safety signs are an important part of risk reduction for
machinery – they are intended to identify and warn against
specific hazards. They also may describe safety precautions, advise
evasive actions to take or provide other directions to eliminate or
reduce hazards.
When designing machine safety signs, it is important to use a
consistent visual layout along with a uniform system for the
recognition of potential personal-injury hazards. This will help to
effectively communicate hazard information.
For safety signs that will be used on machines in the United
States, the best standards to reference are ANSI Z535.4-2007,
Product Safety Signs and Labels; ANSI Z535.3-2002, Criteria for
Safety Symbols; and ANSI Z535.1-2006, Safety Colors. Together,
these standards contain the information needed to specify formats,
colors and symbols for machine safety signs. They also provide
information on widely recognized principles that can aid in the
development of effective safety signs.
ANSI Z535 standards can be purchased online at
http://global.ihs.com.
Types of Panels
A machine safety sign usually consists of three types of panels:
a signal-word panel, a message panel and a safety-symbol
panel.
1. Signal-Word Panel
The signal-word panel is the area of a machine safety sign that
contains the safety alert symbol (exclamation point inside an
equilateral triangle) followed by the signal word. The signal word
is the word that calls attention to the safety sign and designates
the hazard classification. This classification is based on the
probability of being injured if the hazard is not avoided and on
the severity of the resulting injury.
For machinery, the three hazard classifications are designated
by the signal words “DANGER,” “WARNING” and
“CAUTION.” Annex E of ANSI Z535.4-2007 provides
excellent guidance for estimating risk and selecting a signal word.
ANSI Z535.1-2006 provides technical definitions, color standards
and color tolerances for the safety colors specified for the
signal-word panel by ANSI Z535.4-2007.
2. Message Panel
The message panel is the area of the safety sign that contains
the word messages that typically identify the hazard, indicate how
to avoid it and advise of the consequence of not avoiding it. The
order in which the message panel’s content appears is
flexible; however, factors to consider when determining the order
include the target audience’s degree of prior knowledge of
the hazard and the reaction time required to avoid the
hazard.
When developing word messages, many issues must be considered
– from sentence structure to typesetting specifications
– so that they are concise and easily understood. A few ways
to do this are to:
- Write in “headline style.”
- Use active voice.
- Avoid prepositional phrases.
- Use sentence-style capitalization.
- Use sans-serif fonts.
- Use left-aligned text.
In addition, lettering must be of a size that enables a person
to read the message-panel text at a safe viewing distance from the
hazard. Determination of safe viewing distance for the
message-panel text must take into consideration a reasonable
hazard-avoidance reaction time.
3. Safety-Symbol Panel
The safety-symbol panel is the area of the safety sign that
contains the safety symbol. The safety symbol is a graphic
representation intended to convey a message without the use of
words. It may represent a hazard, a hazardous situation, a
precaution to avoid a hazard, a result of not avoiding a hazard or
any combination of these messages.
The safety symbol should be readily understood and should
effectively communicate the message. To aid in the design,
evaluation and use of safety symbols, ANSI Z535.3-2002 should be
used. This standard’s purpose is to promote the adoption and
use of uniform and effective safety symbols for safety
communications.
Annex A of this standard contains several principles and
guidelines for the graphical design of safety symbols, and it shows
numerous examples of the human body and specific body parts in
various positions and orientations including their interaction with
various hazards.
The Importance of Safety Signs
When designed and used properly, safety signs can play an
important role in risk reduction for machinery. The ANSI Z535
standards are the best references, as they specify formats, colors
and symbols for machine safety signs. They also provide information
on widely recognized design principles.
Use of these standards to develop a uniform visual layout and a
consistent system for the recognition of potential hazards will
help in designing the most effective machine safety
signs.
Ryan Ebens is president of Danray Products LLC, a Rockton, Ill.-based manufacturer of machine safeguards and accessories, including machine safety shields, lathe chuck shields, portable (handheld) chip/coolant shields, machine lamps, safety signs and a guard safety scale for compliance with applicable OSHA, ANSI and Canadian Standards Association safety standards for machinery.
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