How no-touch safety tools help keep hands away from pinch points, crush zones, suspended load swing paths, sharp edges, hot surfaces, and line-of-fire hazards.
Engineer the Hand out of Hazard™
Push pull tools and hands-free load control tools are industrial safety tools used to guide, push, pull, position, retrieve, and control loads without placing hands directly on the load. They help reduce exposure to pinch points, crush zones, suspended load swing paths, sharp edges, hot surfaces, and line-of-fire hazards. Common types include push-pull poles, V-head tools, hook tools, taglines, magnetic load control tools, retrieval tools, lifting aids, and impact isolation tools.
The defining principle is physical separation: the tool makes contact with the load; the worker's hands, fingers, and body remain at a safe working distance. This separation is what helps prevent crush injuries, pinch point incidents, struck-by accidents, and line-of-fire exposures — the hazard patterns that make load handling one of the leading sources of serious hand injuries in industrial work.
Hands-free load control is not a single product. It is a task design approach — the No-Touch Load Control Framework™ — in which every task involving load contact is evaluated for whether the hand can be replaced by a tool, tagline, magnetic engagement, or lifting aid.
The core principle: do not guide, steady, align, or position hazardous loads by bare hand. Use a site-approved hands-free load control method — push pull tool, tagline, magnetic tool, hook tool, retrieval tool, lifting aid, or other engineered no-touch handling aid.
A structured site-level process for identifying tasks where hand contact with loads or hazard zones occurs, then redesigning those tasks using the appropriate hands-free method for the temperature zone, load type, and required standoff distance.
Most hand injuries in industrial environments occur during tasks that workers perform every day — not in dramatic accidents, but in ordinary moments when the hand enters the hazard zone.
Workers instinctively reach out to stop or steady a swinging suspended load. The hand enters the swing and fall zone. Any unexpected movement crushes or strikes the hand against a fixed surface.
Bolt hole and flange alignment requires fingers inside the convergence zone between two heavy surfaces. The load does not need to move far to cause a crush or amputation injury.
Final positioning of heavy components — into fixtures, onto saddles, against abutments — places the hand between the load and the receiving surface. The last few millimetres are where most injuries happen.
Reaching into rigging areas to retrieve taglines, chains, or slings after a lift places the hand near load contact points and below suspended components.
One hand holds the chisel, punch, or flogging spanner while the other hand strikes. Every missed strike — or rebound — sends force directly into the holding hand.
Direct hand contact with freshly processed castings, steel edges, or chemically contaminated components during repositioning, staging, or transfer operations.
The issue is not only worker behaviour. The issue is task design. If completing a task requires a hand in the hazard zone, the task needs to be redesigned — not just the glove upgraded. Engineer the Hand out of Hazard™
The hierarchy of controls is one of the most important principles in occupational safety. Understanding where hands-free tools sit in that hierarchy explains why they provide a stronger level of protection than PPE alone.
Gloves are important and must remain part of the PPE programme for most industrial tasks. But a glove cannot move the hand out of a crush zone. It cannot stop a suspended load from swinging. It cannot prevent a finger from entering a pinch point.
Push pull tools, taglines, magnetic tools, retrieval tools, and chisel holders are engineering controls because they change the physical task — they reduce the frequency and duration of hand exposure to hazard zones, rather than attempting to protect the hand once it is already there.
The practical goal is not to choose between PPE and engineering controls. The goal is to apply the highest level of control possible for each task, then use PPE as the layer below it — not as the primary protection.
Hands-free tools sit at Level 3 in the hierarchy. That is three levels above gloves.
Hands-free tools are relevant wherever one of these ten hazard conditions is present during load handling, positioning, or assembly operations.
What happens: Worker positioned below or adjacent to a crane or hoist-suspended load. Any unplanned movement can result in crush or struck-by injury.
How hands-free helps: The tool provides standoff distance; the operator remains outside the fall and swing zone.
What happens: A body part is caught between a moving load and a fixed surface — the most common cause of finger amputations in industrial settings.
How hands-free helps: The tool contacts the load; the worker's hands remain outside the convergence zone.
What happens: A load descends toward a fixed surface with a body part in the convergence zone. Crushing forces can be many multiples of load weight during deceleration.
How hands-free helps: The operator controls from a safe distance; body never positioned under or alongside the load.
What happens: A swinging, rolling, or unexpectedly moving load contacts the worker. Sea swell, wind, and off-centre rigging all contribute to unpredictable load movement.
How hands-free helps: The tool extends the worker's reach; clearance from the full swing arc is maintained.
What happens: Body compressed between two converging surfaces during equipment installation, module mating, or structural connection.
How hands-free helps: The operator guides from outside the convergence zone entirely.
What happens: Worker positioned in the path of potential energy release — where any equipment failure or load shift would send energy directly toward them.
How hands-free helps: The operator's body is repositioned outside the line-of-fire zone.
What happens: Workers reach near hot materials — freshly processed steel, hot castings, or process piping — risking severe burns.
How hands-free helps: Distance is the protection; the operator's hands never contact the hot load. Note: standard polymer/rubber tool heads are not rated for sustained direct contact with thermally extreme surfaces.
What happens: Direct contact with cut edges of steel plate, structural sections, or castings causes lacerations from minor to amputating severity.
How hands-free helps: The tool head contacts the load; the worker's skin never touches the sharp edge.
What happens: Guiding loads near live electrical equipment creates a current path through any conductive tool — potentially lethal at HV proximity.
How hands-free helps: Non-conductive fiberglass shaft tools rated to 35kV/inch provide no conductive current path through the tool.
What happens: Direct hand contact with an unstable, unbalanced, or shifting load. When the load moves unexpectedly, the worker holding it has no safe escape path.
How hands-free helps: Safe distance means the operator can step back; no hand contact to release.
Not every task requires the same tool. Understanding the function of each tool type is the first step in selecting the right hands-free method for each task.
The most versatile hands-free load control tool. Used for pushing, pulling, guiding, and positioning loads from a safer working distance. Typically constructed from high-strength fiberglass (non-conductive) or engineered polymers, with a push head and ergonomic handle. Available in multiple lengths to suit confined spaces through to large offshore crane lifts. Can include hook features for tagline retrieval.
Primary uses: Suspended load guidance, final positioning, pipe and component alignment, load landing, structural steel placement.
Push pull tools fitted with a V-shaped or dual-profile head designed to engage cylindrical, tubular, and irregular load profiles without slipping. The V geometry naturally centres on round sections — pipes, tubes, beams, frames — and holds engagement during directional control.
Primary uses: Drill pipe and casing guidance, tubular positioning, pipe spool handling, beam alignment at connections.
Purpose-designed tools for retrieving taglines, slings, chains, shackles, cables, and components without reaching into hazard zones. Hook geometry allows the operator to engage a loop, sling eye, or component from a safe distance and guide it out of the hazard area. Some designs combine push-pull and hook functions in a single tool.
Primary uses: Tagline retrieval, sling and chain recovery, rigging hook-up assistance, confined space load handling.
Rope or synthetic taglines attached to suspended loads to provide directional control during crane lifts. The operator holds the tagline from outside the fall zone and applies gentle tension to orient, steady, or slow rotation of the load. Taglines are an engineering control — they physically separate the operator's hands from the suspended load during the entire lift.
Primary uses: Suspended load orientation, swing control, rotation prevention, directional guidance during landing.
Permanent magnet or switchable magnet tools that engage ferrous steel surfaces without direct hand contact. Useful for handling cold steel components, picking up dropped parts, clearing machining chips, and component staging. Important limitation: Magnetic tools must only be used on ambient ferrous surfaces. Heat reduces magnetic holding force significantly, making them unsuitable for hot castings, melt shop environments, or temperature-sensitive applications.
Chisel holders, punch holders, Fingersaver-style tools, and wrench guards designed to remove the holding hand from the hammer and impact strike zone. In normal chisel or punch work, one hand holds the tool while the other strikes — placing the holding hand in the direct path of every miss, rebound, or glancing blow. Impact isolation tools grip the chisel or punch and hold it securely while the operator's hand holds the device, not the struck tool.
Primary uses: Chipping, chiselling, punch work, flogging spanner operations, stake driving.
Handles, carrying slings, pipe lifting grips, valve lifting bails, and ergonomic grips that reduce direct hand contact with sharp, awkward, hot, or heavy items during manual handling. They provide a safe, secure grip point and help distribute load over more of the hand and body, reducing exposure to sharp edges and hot surfaces during short-distance carries and repositioning tasks.
Primary uses: Pipe and spool carries, plate and panel handling, valve and equipment repositioning, component staging.
Tool selection should start with the task — what is the hand currently doing, and what tool or method can replace that hand contact?
| Task Need | Tool Type | Typical Use |
|---|---|---|
| Push / position | Push pull tool | Load landing, pipe alignment, fixture positioning, structural steel placement |
| Pull / retrieve | Hook / retrieval tool | Tagline retrieval, slings, chains, cables, confined space load handling |
| Control suspended load direction | Tagline | Crane lifts, large suspended components, swing and rotation control |
| Engage ambient ferrous surface | Magnetic tool | Cold steel parts, CNC chip clearing, component staging, dropped object recovery |
| Keep hands away from hammer strike | Impact isolation tool | Chisel, punch, flogging spanner, stake, rivet work |
| Carry awkward, sharp, or hot material | Manual lifting aid | Pipes, plates, valves, components, assemblies in short-range manual moves |
The correct tool depends on temperature, load material, surface shape, direction of force, required standoff distance, and whether the load is suspended, hot, sharp, unstable, or energised. The first question is never: which product do we have? The first question is: what is the hand currently doing, and how do we remove that hand from the hazard?
Not every tool is suitable in every environment. Zone-based selection is a critical part of the No-Touch Load Control Framework™ — the zone determines which tool types are appropriate before task-level selection begins.
| Zone | Typical Area | Suitable Tools | Avoid |
|---|---|---|---|
| Molten / Extreme Heat | Foundry, melt shop, ladle area, tapping floor | Heat-rated all-metal mechanical tools only | Polymer heads Standard taglines Magnetic tools |
| Hot Residual | Hot castings, hot steel, process piping, shakeout area, fettling | Mechanical distance tools, heat-rated heads | Magnetic tools (unless temperature-rated) |
| Ambient Industrial | CNC machining, cold assembly, warehousing, fabrication | Push pull tools, taglines, magnetic tools, retrieval tools | Wrong-length tools Unrated improvised tools |
| Electrical Proximity | Substations, switchgear rooms, transformer bays, HV utilities | Non-conductive tools (fiberglass, rated polymer) where suitable | Conductive metal tools Improvised rods |
| Suspended Load Zone | Crane bays, rigging areas, offshore crane decks, rig floors | Taglines, push pull tools from outside fall zone | Bare-hand guiding Position inside fall zone |
Before selecting a tool, ask three questions: (1) What is the temperature zone? (2) What is the hand currently doing? (3) Does the task require push, pull, retrieve, guide, hold, or impact isolation? Answer the zone question first — it eliminates unsuitable tool types before individual selection begins.
Both are hands-free load control methods. They serve different functions and are often used together on the same lift.
The final phase of a crane lift — when the load is a few centimetres from its landing point — is when many crush injuries occur. The load is still suspended. Crane tension is still present. Any movement, crane drift, or sling settling can cause the load to shift. Hands should not go between the load and the receiving surface until crane tension is fully released and the load is confirmed stable.
Best practice: Use taglines for swing and directional control throughout the lift. Use push pull tools for final positioning. Release crane tension before allowing hand contact with the seated load.
Hands-free load control is relevant in every industry where loads are guided, positioned, or controlled near workers' hands and bodies.
Practical, hazard-validated applications across global industry where hands-free load control methods help reduce hand exposure.
In fabrication shops, steel yards, rig floors, and maintenance workshops worldwide, workers who need to guide a crane-handled load often reach for whatever is nearby. The intent is correct — keep hands off the load. The execution introduces new risks.
An improvised rod solves the right problem — keeping hands off the load — but introduces substitution hazards in doing so. It has no known strength, no inspection standard, no controlled failure mode, and no specification for procurement or audit. When it slips, when the load shifts, when the balance point moves — the consequence transfers directly to the worker holding the rod.
A purpose-designed hands-free tool is engineered, rated, inspectable, and traceable. It can be registered in a tool inventory, included in a pre-task check, and presented to a safety auditor as evidence of an engineering control. The improvised bar cannot. A single recordable hand injury carries a median direct cost of over $13,700 (CDC/NIOSH) — a fraction of which covers a full set of engineered hands-free tools for an entire crane bay or workshop.
Hand Safety First offers a range of engineered, purpose-designed hands-free load control tools across the HSF and PSC product families — covering push pull tools, magnetic tools, and no-touch handling aids for industrial applications.
V-style head with hook profiles for pushing, pulling, guiding, and positioning loads. Suitable for a wide range of load profiles including tubulars, structural sections, and panels.
Non-conductive fiberglass shaft rated to 35kV per inch, with ergonomic D-grip handle and wide-face rubber push head. Available in 9 sizes from 21″ to 96″. Designed for suspended load guidance, pipe alignment, and no-touch load control across all industrial environments.
Extendable push/pull tool for hands-free load control with variable reach. Designed for sling and tagline retrieval, load guiding, and positioning tasks where a fixed-length tool cannot cover the required standoff distance.
Purpose-engineered for tubular, pipe, and cylindrical load handling. The TubularGuider™ head profile engages round sections securely, supporting hands-free guidance of drill pipe, casing, process piping, and structural tubes without hand contact.
Premium engineered no-touch load control tools for heavy-duty industrial and lifting applications. Suitable for demanding environments including offshore, mining, steel, and energy sectors.
For ambient ferrous surfaces where magnetic engagement is suitable. Useful for cold steel component handling, CNC chip clearing, dropped object recovery, and component staging.
Datasheets, specifications, zone selection guidance, and application examples for the full Hand Safety First product range.
Hands-free tools are most effective as part of a structured task approach. These best practices apply across all tool types and applications.
Push pull tools and hands-free load control tools are intended to assist with guiding, pushing, pulling, retrieving, positioning, and controlling loads from a safer distance. They are not lifting devices and must not be used to lift, suspend, support, stop, or counteract uncontrolled crane movement. Always use tools within site-approved procedures, lifting plans, and manufacturer guidance.
Common questions from EHS managers, safety officers, riggers, and procurement teams.
Hand injuries are rarely solved by PPE alone. The stronger approach is to identify where hands enter hazard zones, then redesign those tasks using distance tools, taglines, magnetic tools, hooks, lifting aids, or other no-touch handling methods. We can help you identify the right tools for your specific operations, zones, and load types.
Engineer the Hand out of Hazard™