Lockout/Tagout & Electrically Safe Work Condition
Establishing an electrically safe work condition, LOTO step sequence, absence of voltage verification, live-dead-live testing, and interlocks.
- List the six steps to establish an electrically safe work condition in order
- Explain the purpose and requirements of lockout/tagout devices
- Describe the live-dead-live testing method for absence of voltage verification
- Identify when simple lockout vs. complex lockout procedures apply
- Explain the role of interlocks and their limitations in LOTO
Leçon 1
Establishing an Electrically Safe Work Condition
The ESWC Process
An Electrically Safe Work Condition (ESWC) is the state where all energized conductors and circuit parts have been disconnected, locked out, tagged, tested, and grounded (if necessary) so that workers can safely perform tasks. Establishing an ESWC is the primary method for protecting workers - it eliminates the hazard entirely.
The six steps must be performed in order:
Step Order Matters
The exam frequently tests the correct sequence of ESWC steps. Testing for absence of voltage is Step 5 - it comes AFTER lockout/tagout is applied. You must verify the circuit is de-energized while wearing appropriate PPE because the circuit may still be live at this point.
Stored Energy
After disconnecting and locking out, stored energy may still be present in the system. Sources of stored energy include:
- Capacitors - can hold a charge for hours or days
- Inductors and transformers - magnetic energy
- Batteries and UPS systems - backup power sources
- Regenerative drives - motors that can feed back voltage
- Solar arrays - generate voltage whenever light is present
All stored energy must be released or blocked before the ESWC is considered established.
An ESWC requires six steps performed in order: identify, disconnect, verify, LOTO, test for voltage, and ground. Testing for absence of voltage is Step 5 and requires PPE because the circuit may still be live. All stored energy must be addressed.