Designing safe machines - risk assessment in practice
Webinar - IBF Solutions GmbH
In just one day, technical designers and technical planners learn how risk assessments should be integrated as efficiently as possible into the development processes of machines or systems.
The Machinery Directive and Machinery Regulation require:"The manufacturer of machinery ...must ensure that a risk assessment is carried out ... The machinery must then be designed and constructed taking into account the results of the risk assessment." This legal requirement for the integration of safety in the design processes is one of the most important success factors for the development of sufficiently safe machines or plants!In this one-day seminar, you will learn how to implement these requirements in the daily design processes as efficiently and pragmatically as possible. Without legal details - pure practical relevance! This seminar shapes the first day of our two-day practical seminar "Efficient CE marking and risk assessment of machines and plants". On the second day, you will gain valuable background knowledge and learn how to efficiently implement the other points of the conformity assessment procedure according to the Machinery Directive and Machinery Regulation (beyond the risk assessment). Seminar program Introduction and Overview Introductory example: Why seemingly good solutions do not always meet the legal requirements.Legally required risk assessment: WHO has to do WHAT and WHEN?Cooperation between different departments: mechanical engineering, control engineering, technical documentation, etc.Safety arises (mostly) in a team: important interfaces to sub-suppliers and customers.What does "integration of safety" mean?Which standards support safe design? Do these have to be applied?Caution when delegating design work or risk assessments to third parties!Attention! The design must be based on the law, not (only) on customer requirements! Systematic risk assessment according to EN ISO 12100 Risk assessment according to EN ISO 12100 - How the legal requirements are met as efficiently as possible!What has to be considered in "reasonably foreseeable misuse" - and what not.Figure 1 from EN ISO 12100 as a perfect guide through risk assessment and risk reduction.Relationships between EN ISO 12100 andcontrol systems (EN ISO 13849-1)cyber-securityartificial intelligence Technical and design requirements Which technical requirements are required by law.Strategies for the "inherently safe design".Why non-separating protective devices (e.g. light curtains) are not always suitable for achieving the required risk reduction.Calculation example for electro-sensitive protective devices (ESPEs).What you should pay attention to when selecting protective devices (separating or non-separating).When protective devices have to be interlocked - when guard lockings are required. With the help of several exercises and examples, you will learn the practical approach to pragmatically identifying relevant hazards in the design process, assessing the associated risks and selecting and documenting suitable (and economically justifiable) solutions for risk reduction.You will find out why design engineers tend to exaggerate safety-related solutions and sometimes result in high costs for their company or customers. Less is often more - but only according to the legally permitted concept!
Dauer/zeitlicher Ablauf:
9:00 am - ca. 4:30 pm (CET/CEST)
Material:
The participation fee includes the seminar documents, all participants receive a confirmation of participation
Zielgruppe:
Designers and plannersTechnical managers and design managersProject leaders and project managersCareer starters in design departments
Wir setzen Analyse-Cookies ein, um Ihre Zufriedenheit bei der Nutzung unserer Webseite zu verbessern.
Diese Cookies werden nicht automatisiert gesetzt.
Wenn Sie mit dem Einsatz dieser Cookies einverstanden sind, klicken Sie bitte auf Akzeptieren.
Weitere Informationen finden Sie hier.