Motion times, hand forces, and trunk kinematics when using material handling manipulators in short-distance transfers of moderate mass objects
The risk of musculoskeletal injury associated with manual materials handling tasks has led in part to the use of material handling manipulators, yet there is limited empirical data to facilitate selection, design, and evaluation of these devices. A laboratory study of two types of mechanical manipul...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Applied ergonomics 2000-06, Vol.31 (3), p.227-237 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The risk of musculoskeletal injury associated with manual materials handling tasks has led in part to the use of material handling manipulators, yet there is limited empirical data to facilitate selection, design, and evaluation of these devices. A laboratory study of two types of mechanical manipulators (articulated arm and overhead hoist) was conducted of short-distance transfers of moderate loads, and the influence of various task parameters and transfer method on motion times, peak hand forces, and torso kinematics was obtained. Use of manipulators increased elemental motion times for symmetric sagittal plane transfers by 36–63%, and asymmetric transfers (in the frontal plane) by 62–115%, compared to similar transfers performed manually. Peak hand forces were significantly lower with both manipulators (40–50%), and approximately 10% higher for asymmetric versus symmetric transfers. Overall torso kinematics were grossly similar with and without a manipulator. These results suggest that for self-paced job tasks, moderate mass objects will be transferred slower over short distances and with lower levels of external (hand) forces when using mechanical aids. These simple effects, however, were influenced by object mass and transfer height. |
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ISSN: | 0003-6870 1872-9126 |
DOI: | 10.1016/S0003-6870(99)00062-9 |