A safety net is a net to protect people from injury after falling from heights by limiting the distance they fall, and deflecting to dissipate the impact energy. The term also refers to devices for arresting falling or flying objects for the safety of people beyond or below the net. Safety nets are used in construction, building maintenance, entertainment, or other industries.
Video Safety net
Action of a safety-net
A safety-net, gives much-more time to a falling object to come into zero velocity than hard ground. In physical terms, this means more time for deceleration and kinetic energy transfer, resulting in a softer landing and much lower risk of damage.
What-kind of net to-be used, depends upon many factors, (such-as the factors that could determine force of the impact) such as falling-objects's speed and mass. To encounter more-force, a more total-width of the net, is required. The minimum-distance of the spot on net at which object impacted, and the edge of net (nearest-edge), matters, and to be kept more than certain-limit. There is role of materials used to make the ropes of net (such-as an iron-rod-grid will-not work as-good-as flexible and extensible ropes), and the tension or stretch used to make the net (stored in the ropes), also have some roles. The net is to be set at an appropriate height from the hard-ground, so-that the object, along-with the rope, does not clash with the hard-ground. The mesh-hole size should-not be so-big that falling object/people/part-of-it could pass through the holes.
Maps Safety net
Uses
Escape from a building during a disaster (including fire), construction-work, action-sports, etc.
See also
- Construction site safety
- Fall arrest harness
- Roof edge protection
- Shock absorber
- Buffer (disambiguation)
- Buffer stop
- Buffer (rail transport)
- Damping
- Damper (disambiguation)
- Damped wave
- Cushioning
- Shock (mechanics)
- Impact (mechanics)
- Jerk (physics)
- Impulse (physics)
- Collision
- Brake
- Terminal velocity
References
External links
- Safety Net Systems // Occupational Safety & Health Administration
- Safety nets: Fall protection for the construction industry / National Safety Council Data Sheet 608, February 2006
- Fall Protection in Construction, OSHA3146 / U.S. Department of Labor Occupational Safety and Health Administration, 1998, page 6 "Fall Protection Systems Criteria and Practices", page 12 "Safety Net Systems"
- Guide to Fall Protection Regulations, Workers Compensation Board, Canada, June 2013, page 11
- A technical guide to the selection and use of fall prevention and arrest equipment / Glasgow Caledonian University for the Health and Safety Executive 2005 - "7.0 FALL ARREST NETTING (SAFETY NETS)" pp 107-138
Source of article : Wikipedia