PV work combines construction hazards (ladders, roofs, tools, weather) with electrical hazards (shock, arc flash). A safe installer builds a repeatable routine:
PPE is the last line of defense. Typical PV PPE may include: - Eye protection (impact-rated) - Gloves matched to the hazard (cut-resistant vs. electrical-rated) - Hard hat (jobsite dependent) - Hearing protection (when using loud tools) - High-visibility clothing (traffic/active sites) - Appropriate footwear (slip-resistant; often safety toe)
Heat, wind, rain, and lightning materially change risk. If conditions exceed safe limits, the safest decision is to pause work.
PV work combines construction hazards (ladders, roofs, tools, weather) with electrical hazards (shock, arc flash). A safe installer builds a repeatable routine:
PPE is the last line of defense. Typical PV PPE may include: - Eye protection (impact-rated) - Gloves matched to the hazard (cut-resistant vs. electrical-rated) - Hard hat (jobsite dependent) - Hearing protection (when using loud tools) - High-visibility clothing (traffic/active sites) - Appropriate footwear (slip-resistant; often safety toe)
Heat, wind, rain, and lightning materially change risk. If conditions exceed safe limits, the safest decision is to pause work.