That's terrible, I'm in construction myself, I've been a residential painter and drywaller for 22 years and went to school for respirator safety and fall safety and first aid and CPR, these were requirements for the company I'd worked for and after 40 years of being in business the owner wanted to retire and finally shut the doors. Anyway, we had to learn the pitch of ladders with the height, we always took safety precautions and did things right but after 20 years, a couple years ago, I was pressure washing a two story house with my co-workers and I was on a roof clip and no harness on and the 24 ft ladder was soaked from washing and I carefully stepped off the roof clip onto my ladder and slipped and went upside down 24 ft onto a pile of cinder blocks face first, I knocked out abunch of teeth, tore my MCL severely and split my head right down to the skull, I'm so grateful I didn't get killed or paralyzed. I still paint but I'm even more careful.
I'm an industrial red seal painter and my coworker was working off a ladder and fell from about 14' but on the way down hit his head on a edge and broke his back and gave himself brain damage. He can't smell or taste anything and it effected his mental capabilities. Safety first.
I’ve seen this happen in person. Guy on the hose was about 6’4” 250 pounds...threw him about ten feet, off of scaffolding. It was a fatal landing. I was a civil engineer on the job overseeing all reinforced concrete placement. Blockage to lethal accident happened within seconds.
I have spent yrs on a pump hose. I can usually tell when a air pocket is coming thru. However I got thrown close to 30' one time off a fully extended 65 m boom with the hose fully pulled with no slack and over my head . With the pump maxed out. Launched me like a rocket.
Keep these safety videos coming. They’re sad but we learn from them even though I’ll never operate a concrete pump. Some safety principles apply to other situations, in this case the power of compressed air, a dangerous set up and unprepared workers.
For 15 years I worked on a pool plaster crew, "plaster" is a cement mixture, I've seen some serious hose whips and blows. seen mud get blown clear over a 3 story house and land in the pool on the other side. Another time, watched as the guys running the pump blew 2 hoses and shot mud all over the side of a commercial building twice in the same day. Saw a FNG mixer guy remove the cam lock on a hose that had pressure and he got thrown back into a chain link fence, feet up in the air, he was ok. Saw a guy reach down and undo a packed hose and when the pressure released it turned his thumb into hamburger and blew mud all over his face, he had to go to the hospital. Seen mud blown all over the side of a residential house more than once. Saw the pins blow out on the cam locks blowing the hose off the pump and causing the metal end of the hose to severely dent the garage door of a house, seen mud sprayed all over cars and driveways more times than I can count. It's a wonder I was never injured by a packed hose.
I did gunite pools for 5 years and my boss was 350 pound ex football player and ive seen it throw him around...if you let go of that hose its a rap...ive had to jump in and run across rebar and help him before it got away from him...ive tore my knees up from falling trying to get to him...clogs are dangerous...gunite don't get wet till it reaches the end of the hose...ive held it and shot it for about 20 minutes and thats about all I can handle....
I will remember this for my upcoming pool project. Thank you so very much for this info. May that man Rest In Peace and May his family and friends be showered with many happy memories.❤️
When I was just starting out as a tender for a Mason we were pouring footings for a duplex. We had been seeing chuncks come out the hose as we went along. We were just getting close to being done pumping and the operator went up into the garage section to pour the jump up form. The hose blocked up and started to shake, all I could think was "something really bad is about to happen." It reminded me of when firefighters turn on a hose from a hydrant and let it go. It ripped out of the operators hands flew behind him and knocked him in the back. He fell about five feet flat on his back onto our forms. It was a miracle he didn't land on our fork stakes. Concrete was just whipping all over the place because of the pressure and the operator was really shaken up. He took off the rest of the week we found out later because of how bad he was bruised up. These things are no toy and take skill and knowledge to operate. Even with 20 years of experience this accident still happened. These jobs come with inherent risk.
I've been pumping concrete 30 years all you got to do is back away from the tube until the starts flowing. and you should have a rope tied to it so you can pull it back to you should it swing akwardly in the wrong direction. Don't rely on the operator totally.
Robert K Belunek spot on. i think 'workplace health and safety' rules are making people complacent. in my experience, site workers assume safety is assured once a Jobsite Checklist and HSE Report is completed. Events and incidents happen when we lose fear and respect for power/pressure equipment. Stay safe all. Happy new year from Australia
I've been in Concrete construction work for 45 years... Nothing is the same routine .... Things change every minute of the work day.... This accident... reminds all of us ...of how the trade is open for rare...but severe accidents... when a series of conditions line up. On a drizzly morning...a water main crew was working near my concrete crew.. A laborer grabbed a chain connected to a iron pipe being lowered into a trench... A flash of light ... burning...and the man was gruesomely killed instantly ...as stray current from overhead high voltage lines sought ground through his body ...from his contact with the chain .....a... Brutal example of another rare ...but deadly ..set of combined conditions. Thanks for the video...
dylanspriddle Yes, it seemed a hard head slam at a very vunerable area at, brain stem. I am sitting in a waiting room, so I have the sound muted, but that is what I saw at one glance. No helmet.
This pisses me off because like many accidental work place deaths, this was preventable! We all have to look out for ourselves and if your boss puts you in harms way, refuse!
Most likely had multiple placements going on different sides of the job site. With I don't know a house in the way? I do know that it's more expensive to have that thing per hour than a line pump so I'm sure they did a cost analysis.
This is just a reenactment with a animation I'm sure the real job was a commercial job with multiple pours. The only thing this video is stressing is the Whipping hazard and explaining the reasons why this can happen
My respect for all the hard working people that have risky jobs like this and lets not forget war heros thanks guys for making the world a better place
@@alexmorefield5573 there was no way I would ever be an "Iron Worker"! I watched them for 3 months as we were adding on a sub section at our plant. I almost had heart failure just watching them! Same with people who build bridges, especially those bridges that are over 100ft. above land and water!
I've been working on the end of a pump truck for 10 years and there are only 2 rules. Never get on the hose when the operator begins to pump. And always run away fast when the hose suddenly stops sending out concrete. It's sad but the deaths are too many for such a simple set of rules. I hope this comment will help someone.
it's not only traped air that can make the hose whip. a blockage caused by slab build up in the concrete truck can make it into the hopper and into the 5" pipe but when it gets to that reducer pipe the tip 90 to the hose it can plug up for just a second and then clear causing the tip to jump & whip before the pump operator can hit the E-stop. happend to me but luckly no one was on the hose and I had a cut tip. sprayed mud for a good 75 feet
Mind you, this was Oztralia where l hope we have high safety standards. Building unions here are pretty active & a site can get closed by unions, or government inspectors, until safety breaches are corrected. • Hated the droning sound those hoses made! :-\
Makes me think sometimes it was done on purpose, there's no way he's the only one there, also he should have the knowledge of such consequences of standing next to that...is really sad if its his first day on the job
The concrete can also set up in the hose. This too will build huge pressures. So much that it can blow backwards up into the hopper. Taking the hoses apart to find and clear that kind of stoppage, is also dangerous.
He lost his life in pursuit of an honest living. He died a respectable man’s death. For those saying “it’s not fair”, that’s true, however, we all have to go someday, but we may not all be doing something as honorable as this when it happens. God bless his soul and give peace and support to this man’s family, at least they can say he died making an honest living for them. 🙏
same thing happened here a few yrs ago and the nozzle took the guys head nearly off. I worked at the ambulance service then and was called to the scene. the hose itself is heavy but the metal nozzles are heavy as well and did a lot of damage.
trxxxtr the last section of a boom pump should ONLY be rubber! A trick we use is pounding nails horizontally through the last few feet of the pump this keeps the concrete from flowing freely. allows absolute control delivery
I made one a few years ago. some guys were giving a sewer kine an enema with a one inch high pressure hose that had a pyramid-shaped metal penetrator on the tip. They pulled it out of the line under pressure. It whipped an hit a guy on the temple. Bad outcome.
@@marionunez8378 generally speaking death by falling onto a 2by4 is pretty unlucky as it is lol. But yeah... real stupid on his part lol. Coulda been avoided in so many ways.
I have seen this several times. Once the concrete came out with such force I was peppered in the face. Even with hard hat and glasses is still really hurt and I was a good 50’ away. One employee lost both legs. Just can’t be to careful... all of the time.
I don't know how these work so I hope someone can inform me. So my question is why doesn't this work like a faucet. Let the worker at the end of hose turn the flow on and off with a valve. Like in a sink? Once again not knowing how the system works but willing to learn, thanks.
I was running the pump in a mine tunnel. It got plugged and my oldest brother held the end of the hose between his legs. When it released the pressure it lifted my 350 pound brother twelve feet in the air hitting his hard hat on tunnel roof and the whole tunnel filled instantly with powder concrete black out no vision but I remembered seeing him ride the hose like it was an anaconda from the movies I ran to him with no vision just by feel and he landed on his feet still holding the end. Valuable lesson that day. Tie off the end to strong object or just leave it be and stay way back.
exactly what i was thinking. ehhh we can get the truck right here but you know what we will pump it over the house for no apparent reason. And now it cost them Marcel.
im sure there was other places on the property that were getting poured.... a company wouldnt sacrifice special equipment when normal pump truck would do.
Thank you for uploading these very educational videos. Hopefully, it will help people to be more careful and to appropriately plan execution of tasks. Studies have shown that many accidents happen to people that are "accustomed" to their job, that is when they let their guard down. Thank you for these videos, I have discovered that I have done a few "mistakes" myself, Ciao, L
I saw one canvas type elbow bend explode, most hit a fresh wall we had poured day before and just struck.. the wall looked like it had been scabbled.!!the force these concrete pumps use is unreal
I was a concrete truck driver for many years and have seen a lot of things and poured into pumps and operated a conveyor truck but I have not seen anything like this, but I am aware of one pumper truck operator who died when he contacted power lines!
I was on a job one time just supervising a pour at 4am to make sure our conduit did not get moved during the pour. There was a blockage and the 2 90's at the job of the crane pump blew apart and starting shooting concrete from 100 feet in the air, the first glob hit some wooden debris on the ground and you could hear it snap, that's when everybody started running for their lives. Very dark also could barely see anything.
Why would you boom pump a front porch on level ground? I've never seen it done with a boom that Damn high for a form that's on level ground.I've always seen it pumped from a ground level hose inline to the truck.
I was the hose man on a poured wall crew for 25 years it get a little sketchy sometimes when you're walking on top of 2 inch forms 20 feet in the air lol. After the poor the pump truck driver clears the hose by wadding up paper and blasting it out. I would hold the hose while he was doing it so the concrete left in the hose wouldn't spray all over the job site. When the paper finally cleared the end of the hose the hose would kick like a mule. I had all I could do to keep ahold of it.
In short, using a hose with a coupler, instead of a collapsible hose, allowed the hose to maintain its shape, and air was allowed to displace the concrete. Further, the coupler acts like a weighted projectile when air pockets come through the line.
We once had that happen at work. We were filling wheel barrels and running them into different apartments in the building. We had a "lid" on the end so that we could stop it from running out when switching wheel barrels. Suddenly the lid "exploded open" and the three of us where thrown around. The blast was so loud it was heard far away. It also fucked up the apartment we were felling from the window in. Scary stuff. Ive never truly felt safe working with it after that.
I witnessed a near miss on a rail construction project. The hose struck a panel a guy was carrying- it knocked him flat, stunned and winded him, but it could have been so much worse.
Ive never been warned of this but have experienced a little bit. Just a couple weeks ago we poured some columns, 1 man on the bagging and 1 poking while we were stood on steel RSJ roughly 1.5 meters off the ground. Im on the poker and the other guy was holding the bagging and exactly this happened but we had a 3" reducer on the end. It almost sent my guy off the steel but he was quick to react and i grabbed him too. It sucks at times where we need to hold the hose in place or be at head height with it etc. Be safe out there boys and girls
I saw a guy working on a tank at my old job get hit by a blasting hose. He went like 10 feet in the air. That sand blew some of his skin off. He didn't die but was critical.
My neighboor was a very experienced floorer, after 35 years doing that (with a stationary mushroom) an accident alike this happened also. the hose smashed into his lower body and splintered his leg. The man in this clip just had a major portion of bad luck. These things happen daily, when you work with it daily it increases the chance on an accident severly. Has nothing to do with inexperience or stupidity. Helmet would have solved it though.
@@matthewstanley1934 nah i think he means a pump in general. you use a damn truck with some wheelbarrows. what are we talking about, 5-10 yards? you dont need a pump truck for that shit
Yeah yeah yeah. Here we go again. A bunch of RUclips arm chair quarterbacks. Experts in the field of concrete. Who would have thought, they all muster at the same location. Stfu you bunch of dill weed idiots. We all know you gained your knowledge from pouring a new concrete sidewalk in your 1 bedroom section 8 housing right next to the road. Go back to playing call of duty lmao
Most of the time pumps are pouring walls with elevated platforms such as scaffolding. Very little room to move. Sometimes guys are actually tied off to columns and trying to pour in the air
Install a closing mechanism at the end of the hose that closes when the pump stops working. That would prevent sucking in air. Or install a pressure sensor near the end of the hose that will automatically turn of the pump if the pressure gets too high.
Some pumps have air collars that do that. The majority of air pockets are due to concrete truck drivers not keeping the pump hopper full and it sucks air right from there.
This happens every day to tradesmen all across this land. But yet you never see a long funeral procession a mile long of fire trucks or police cars stopping traffic for the guy who died. And you don't really hear about it either. And they never call him a hero. But yet they are the ones who have built this country and made it possible for all those Dr. and lawyers and judges and so on and so on to have their really nice places to work and their million-dollar homes. For if not for us, you would still be shitting in a freezing cold or burning hot outhouse working under candlelight. And all those nice little break rooms full of food and drink would only be a dream. What was the guy's name who died??? How much did he make doing this dangerous job??? How much of a bonus did he get for giving blood sweat and life to the Co.??? I tell you everything in this country is backward and upside down. But in truth, it takes an army of us to keep this country moving along and everybody else working and living really nice. And the guy who died probably made about $16 to 20$ an hour building for people who are making $120.000 or more a year who never break a sweat. And he probably could never afford that home they were helping build for someone else.
We did a large driveway that was exposed aggregate broken into several panels by a one foot wide border of black concrete . We were half way done pouring the black borders when the pump truck hiccuped . My Dad was running the hose while my Brother and I were troweling etc. My Dad held on to the hose when it whipped and it threw him 20 feet into the full brick facade on the house we were building . It knocked him out for a few seconds and sprayed approx 25 lineal fest of brick with this concrete that was black as licorice. I don’t recall the problem as this was 30 plus years ago but we ended up cutting out the black and replacing it later. I remember the concrete saw cutting rebar the long ways several times which resulted in what were basically long serrated knives that could cut a hand half way off if you didn’t see it. This is a dangerous trade we’re in. Be safe
It looks like he was not paying attention and did not have a firm hold on the hose. Freak accident him hitting his head. He is 80% copable for his own death. Meaning, if this is a $10 million lawsuit, his family only gets $2 million.
So was it death by hose whip or was it death by head trauma due to a fall? Those are two drastically different things. The hose whipping contributed to the accident but in and of itself may not have been the mechanism of death.
Wow, feel sorry for him...probably the least paid guy too. And everything that went wrong was totally preventable from using an unsafe hose length, the coupler plus the pump operator not telling the the guy to get clear of the hose. Unsafe equipment and operators are an accident waiting to happen on any jobsite.
It would seem to me, that each, & every construction job, “anywhere” should be videotaped, in order to understand certain dangers that may stem from certain elements of destructive practices, & to ascertain how they could be avoided, ... and it should be promoted as public safety issues to the workers, ... Yes, I know, & realize that some jobs are simply inherently dangerous, just to be in the vicinity of these jobs, ... a main reason to fence off jobs, so that onlookers may safely perceive what some of the workers are doing, ... but instead of only allowing the public to see what workers are doing in/on/near a work place, it would behoove the corporation/contractor/homeowner to see what is happening at/on the job site, .... and perhaps insurance costs would then start to drop as people could see what is actually going on at a site, ...
PREVENTION of future tragedies should be paramount! Video/audio taping sites would allow for examination of facts to determine how to improve safety. That's why all airliner cockpit conversation is recorded on U.S. based companies' aircraft at least.
🙏 Deepest Condolences to the Families & Friends of the Deceased ... May he be Blessed to a Better World & Realm 🕯🌻🌿 Thank You for the Safety Warning tutorial ...
I’ve seen hose tips whip but never that violently. The operator should not have let his pump run so long to build up that much pressure behind a blockage. I’ve had pump trucks get rock packed when a mixer driver washed out in the hopper with no fresh mud being discharged into the hopper. Operator will sometimes stand the boom up trying to move the rock pack with gravity. If that doesn’t clear the blockage, when the operator brings it back down, if he kicks the pump back on it can suck up any fresh mud that’s been added to the hopper from a new mixer and can built up pressure in the system quickly. But I’ve seen it blow out an elbow or section of pipe more often than causing the tip hose to whip that badly. Of course, that happens more often on pumps with old system in it that’s probably out of spec for wall thickness and due to be changed. Regardless, a blowout from an elbow at the top of an A-framed boom is not a pleasant thing to have rain down in your head. I wasn’t on the job sight when it happened but we had a pump that was stretched all the way out with boom near horizontal to reach the back of a slab one day and the front outrigger punched thru the street. Found out after investigation that a bad storm drain connection had caused undermining resulting in a big void under the street. Concrete hit its limit and gave way, sending the outrigger down and the truck to go ass over tea kettle basically like a man on all fours losing one arm and falling into his shoulder...unfortunately, that means the boom came down. Hard. On top of one if outperform finishers, pinning him under the boom, they dug the mud out from around his head so he could breathe...but it crushed his back and shoulder. He was in so much pain and couldn’t feel his legs that he was asking the guys to put him out of his misery. ...con el matillo. With a hammer. Ambulance and heavy wrecker both arrived pretty quick and got him out. But he’s paralyzed and idk who ended up being deemed liable for the accident. But the bottom line is... STAY OUT FROM UNDER THE DAMN BOOM! ...and away from the tip hose if it gets jammed up.
Best course Ive taken was Accident Investigation thru the BC Fed. Always multiple factors causing a workplace accident, must investigate to improve workers safety, solid Investigation AF.
That's terrible, I'm in construction myself, I've been a residential painter and drywaller for 22 years and went to school for respirator safety and fall safety and first aid and CPR, these were requirements for the company I'd worked for and after 40 years of being in business the owner wanted to retire and finally shut the doors. Anyway, we had to learn the pitch of ladders with the height, we always took safety precautions and did things right but after 20 years, a couple years ago, I was pressure washing a two story house with my co-workers and I was on a roof clip and no harness on and the 24 ft ladder was soaked from washing and I carefully stepped off the roof clip onto my ladder and slipped and went upside down 24 ft onto a pile of cinder blocks face first, I knocked out abunch of teeth, tore my MCL severely and split my head right down to the skull, I'm so grateful I didn't get killed or paralyzed. I still paint but I'm even more careful.
I'm an industrial red seal painter and my coworker was working off a ladder and fell from about 14' but on the way down hit his head on a edge and broke his back and gave himself brain damage. He can't smell or taste anything and it effected his mental capabilities. Safety first.
so sorry to hear that but so glad you're okay and still here to tell your story and help inform others to be safe as well.
You guys guard your health! Voice of experience: Physical Trauma can cause debilitating problems years later.🇺🇸 😎👍☕
We have too many (illegals) on construction sites, they dont have proper training
I hope everyone stays safe out there! We’re all trying to make a living
What's your name suppose to mean ?
Christina Newton get pumped
@@christinanewton3194 I don’t know lol
@@christinanewton3194 "Get Amped" is the same thing.
It means building yourself up to meet a challenge, or something very risky.
What? I've been trying to make a death this entire time!
I’ve seen this happen in person. Guy on the hose was about 6’4” 250 pounds...threw him about ten feet, off of scaffolding. It was a fatal landing. I was a civil engineer on the job overseeing all reinforced concrete placement. Blockage to lethal accident happened within seconds.
I have spent yrs on a pump hose. I can usually tell when a air pocket is coming thru. However I got thrown close to 30' one time off a fully extended 65 m boom with the hose fully pulled with no slack and over my head . With the pump maxed out. Launched me like a rocket.
Imagine owning this home and learning someone lost their life doing a job for you...
Yeah, very terrible.
Typically homes are made then sold. But ya possible.
Dear Brandon: It's sad, but these are the pitfalls, hazards of doing any job for anyone.
Yes, but the alternative is never to employ anybody, for fear of killing them.
Bad karma
Keep these safety videos coming. They’re sad but we learn from them even though I’ll never operate a concrete pump. Some safety principles apply to other situations, in this case the power of compressed air, a dangerous set up and unprepared workers.
For 15 years I worked on a pool plaster crew, "plaster" is a cement mixture, I've seen some serious hose whips and blows. seen mud get blown clear over a 3 story house and land in the pool on the other side. Another time, watched as the guys running the pump blew 2 hoses and shot mud all over the side of a commercial building twice in the same day. Saw a FNG mixer guy remove the cam lock on a hose that had pressure and he got thrown back into a chain link fence, feet up in the air, he was ok. Saw a guy reach down and undo a packed hose and when the pressure released it turned his thumb into hamburger and blew mud all over his face, he had to go to the hospital. Seen mud blown all over the side of a residential house more than once. Saw the pins blow out on the cam locks blowing the hose off the pump and causing the metal end of the hose to severely dent the garage door of a house, seen mud sprayed all over cars and driveways more times than I can count. It's a wonder I was never injured by a packed hose.
Very interesting thanks for sharing
Always keep your hose unclogged,lol!
So, Jegr: Why are there so many incidents?
Wow that's some crazy stories. Sounds like some of these stories could be avoided with proper training.
I did gunite pools for 5 years and my boss was 350 pound ex football player and ive seen it throw him around...if you let go of that hose its a rap...ive had to jump in and run across rebar and help him before it got away from him...ive tore my knees up from falling trying to get to him...clogs are dangerous...gunite don't get wet till it reaches the end of the hose...ive held it and shot it for about 20 minutes and thats about all I can handle....
I will remember this for my upcoming pool project. Thank you so very much for this info. May that man Rest In Peace and May his family and friends be showered with many happy memories.❤️
When I was just starting out as a tender for a Mason we were pouring footings for a duplex. We had been seeing chuncks come out the hose as we went along. We were just getting close to being done pumping and the operator went up into the garage section to pour the jump up form. The hose blocked up and started to shake, all I could think was "something really bad is about to happen." It reminded me of when firefighters turn on a hose from a hydrant and let it go. It ripped out of the operators hands flew behind him and knocked him in the back. He fell about five feet flat on his back onto our forms. It was a miracle he didn't land on our fork stakes. Concrete was just whipping all over the place because of the pressure and the operator was really shaken up. He took off the rest of the week we found out later because of how bad he was bruised up. These things are no toy and take skill and knowledge to operate. Even with 20 years of experience this accident still happened. These jobs come with inherent risk.
these hose ain't loyal.
omarpb1 don’t know why this hasn’t got more thumbs up
Bros before hose.
@@Rustyshackleford752 cause of trump
@@ViceKnIghtTA not no more 😂
Noooo 😂
Damn that's sad. He was just trying to make a living.
Yup, one of the most deaths that occurred regularly is work related accidents.
Fr that’s sad man
And now hes dead
The pump truck made a killing. Srsly tho rip. Construction is dangerous work.
I've been pumping concrete 30 years all you got to do is back away from the tube until the starts flowing. and you should have a rope tied to it so you can pull it back to you should it swing akwardly in the wrong direction. Don't rely on the operator totally.
+Robert K Belunek spot on robert, i have always had rope tied to the end, taught this to labour's .
Robert K Belunek spot on. i think 'workplace health and safety' rules are making people complacent. in my experience, site workers assume safety is assured once a Jobsite Checklist and HSE Report is completed.
Events and incidents happen when we lose fear and respect for power/pressure equipment.
Stay safe all. Happy new year from Australia
I've been in Concrete construction work for 45 years... Nothing is the same routine .... Things change every minute of the work day....
This accident... reminds all of us ...of how the trade is open for rare...but severe accidents... when a series of conditions line up.
On a drizzly morning...a water main crew was working near my concrete crew.. A laborer grabbed a chain connected to a iron pipe being lowered into a trench... A flash of light ... burning...and the man was gruesomely killed instantly ...as stray current from overhead high voltage lines sought ground through his body ...from his contact with the chain .....a... Brutal example of another rare ...but deadly ..set of combined conditions.
Thanks for the video...
Construction is a dangerous job,people wonder why "WE WANT TO GET PAID"!!
I didn't know concrete hose whipping is a hazard.
Much respect for construction workers.
Keep Calm and Stay Safe
why was he not wearing a helmet?
Thinking the same thing.
It’s called a hard hat!
Helmets aren't typical for most concrete work, especially residential.
dylanspriddle Yes, it seemed a hard head slam at a very vunerable area at, brain stem. I am sitting in a waiting room, so I have the sound muted, but that is what I saw at one glance. No helmet.
Any site I’ve been on I’ve maybe seen one concrete worker wear a hard hat. Depends on the site. But yes hard hats should always be worn.
This pisses me off because like many accidental work place deaths, this was preventable! We all have to look out for ourselves and if your boss puts you in harms way, refuse!
why were they using a boom to pump a job which could've easily be done with a line pump?
Line pumps are not easier especially with the big hose
@@tomtroy1745, for that little sidewalk? Line pump would be way easier. But honestly they should've just dumped straight out of the truck
Most likely had multiple placements going on different sides of the job site. With I don't know a house in the way? I do know that it's more expensive to have that thing per hour than a line pump so I'm sure they did a cost analysis.
This is just a reenactment with a animation I'm sure the real job was a commercial job with multiple pours. The only thing this video is stressing is the Whipping hazard and explaining the reasons why this can happen
@@tomtroy1745 that’s why most line pumps have a reducer that drop a size smaller so you can feed it better and it’s not as heavy
Thanks for sharing I didn't realise the danger in a concrete pump.
This hits to close to home for me! My brother owns and operates a concrete company! Many blessings to those that do this!
My respect for all the hard working people that have risky jobs like this and lets not forget war heros thanks guys for making the world a better place
Look up rodbusters and iron workers
Don't forget all my fellow yellows that work on any project on any road!
I pour concrete. Working with pump isn’t dangerous. Just an accident happen. But thanks.
@@alexmorefield5573 there was no way I would ever be an "Iron Worker"!
I watched them for 3 months as we were adding on a sub section at our plant.
I almost had heart failure just watching them!
Same with people who build bridges, especially those bridges that are over 100ft. above land and water!
Your welcome I started this at 17 now I’m a Vice President in a company 22yrs old
When the concrete truck driver lets the pump run dry sends a blast of air thur the line cause's it to whip happens more than ya think.
I've been working on the end of a pump truck for 10 years and there are only 2 rules. Never get on the hose when the operator begins to pump. And always run away fast when the hose suddenly stops sending out concrete.
It's sad but the deaths are too many for such a simple set of rules. I hope this comment will help someone.
I used to hold that hose every once in awhile back in my younger days. Never entered my mind it could kill me
Thankful you shared this, never heard of hose whipping until I saw this.
Very dangerous job if done wrong...
it's not only traped air that can make the hose whip. a blockage caused by slab build up in the concrete truck can make it into the hopper and into the 5" pipe but when it gets to that reducer pipe the tip 90 to the hose it can plug up for just a second and then clear causing the tip to jump & whip before the pump operator can hit the E-stop. happend to me but luckly no one was on the hose and I had a cut tip. sprayed mud for a good 75 feet
Have been near concrete being poured on building sites in past.
• Never warned to keep clear, or danger of whipping.
Same. Poured for days building bridge panels.
I camp close to a whipping pump hose nearly took me out
Mind you, this was Oztralia where l hope we have high safety standards. Building unions here are pretty active & a site can get closed by unions, or government inspectors, until safety breaches are corrected.
• Hated the droning sound those hoses made! :-\
Makes me think sometimes it was done on purpose, there's no way he's the only one there, also he should have the knowledge of such consequences of standing next to that...is really sad if its his first day on the job
I guess this is why I see some in Australia have like a big pair tongs clamping it and holding it well back from the end of the hose .
im sorry that man lost his life just going to work.
Imagine that.....probably a man with a wife and kids....got up and went to work one day, not realizing it was his last.
The concrete can also set up in the hose. This too will build huge pressures. So much that it can blow backwards up into the hopper. Taking the hoses apart to find and clear that kind of stoppage, is also dangerous.
He lost his life in pursuit of an honest living. He died a respectable man’s death. For those saying “it’s not fair”, that’s true, however, we all have to go someday, but we may not all be doing something as honorable as this when it happens.
God bless his soul and give peace and support to this man’s family, at least they can say he died making an honest living for them. 🙏
same thing happened here a few yrs ago and the nozzle took the guys head nearly off. I worked at the ambulance service then and was called to the scene. the hose itself is heavy but the metal nozzles are heavy as well and did a lot of damage.
trxxxtr the last section of a boom pump should ONLY be rubber! A trick we use is pounding nails horizontally through the last few feet of the pump this keeps the concrete from flowing freely. allows absolute control delivery
I made one a few years ago. some guys were giving a sewer kine an enema with a one inch high pressure hose that had a pyramid-shaped metal penetrator on the tip. They pulled it out of the line under pressure. It whipped an hit a guy on the temple. Bad outcome.
The amount of danger at a construction is insane. When I first started my field tech job it was eye opening of the hazardous conditions.
Hurts my heart that this video is out here forever a reminder to this man's family 🥺
Sorry for the man who lost his life! 😔 🙏 May he ( RIP) 💐Amen! 💒
My job used to be clearing “ pack offs” with an air hose on these boom trucks. It is extremely violent when they clear.
thank you for posting this.
I totally didn't know that, thanks.
The poor guy did not even had a hard hat that could save his life.
P.P.E. VERY IMPORTANT
@@marionunez8378 generally speaking death by falling onto a 2by4 is pretty unlucky as it is lol. But yeah... real stupid on his part lol. Coulda been avoided in so many ways.
I have seen this several times. Once the concrete came out with such force I was peppered in the face. Even with hard hat and glasses is still really hurt and I was a good 50’ away. One employee lost both legs. Just can’t be to careful... all of the time.
Thanks for posting, never thought of that hazard. Spending a fair amount of time around concrete trucks this is valuable. Be well friend!
Are people down voting the outcome, or the video? I don't get it.. The video explains it all and then some.
I don't know how these work so I hope someone can inform me. So my question is why doesn't this work like a faucet. Let the worker at the end of hose turn the flow on and off with a valve. Like in a sink? Once again not knowing how the system works but willing to learn, thanks.
It has to be controlled from the pump end. If you shut the valve with the pump still running the pressure would build up causing a similar outcome.
hydraulic pumps
I was running the pump in a mine tunnel. It got plugged and my oldest brother held the end of the hose between his legs. When it released the pressure it lifted my 350 pound brother twelve feet in the air hitting his hard hat on tunnel roof and the whole tunnel filled instantly with powder concrete black out no vision but I remembered seeing him ride the hose like it was an anaconda from the movies I ran to him with no vision just by feel and he landed on his feet still holding the end. Valuable lesson that day. Tie off the end to strong object or just leave it be and stay way back.
why would you use a boom for that?
Right just wheelbarrow it haha
exactly what i was thinking. ehhh we can get the truck right here but you know what we will pump it over the house for no apparent reason. And now it cost them Marcel.
im sure there was other places on the property that were getting poured.... a company wouldnt sacrifice special equipment when normal pump truck would do.
Thank you for uploading these very educational videos. Hopefully, it will help people to be more careful and to appropriately plan execution of tasks. Studies have shown that many accidents happen to people that are "accustomed" to their job, that is when they let their guard down. Thank you for these videos, I have discovered that I have done a few "mistakes" myself, Ciao, L
That poor man and his family. We just never know when our time is up. Rip
I saw one canvas type elbow bend explode, most hit a fresh wall we had poured day before and just struck.. the wall looked like it had been scabbled.!!the force these concrete pumps use is unreal
I was a concrete truck driver for many years and have seen a lot of things and poured into pumps and operated a conveyor truck but I have not seen anything like this, but I am aware of one pumper truck operator who died when he contacted power lines!
Why is the worker did not wear the safety helmet?
Too cool for skool
And how many times has this already happened?
I was on a job one time just supervising a pour at 4am to make sure our conduit did not get moved during the pour. There was a blockage and the 2 90's at the job of the crane pump blew apart and starting shooting concrete from 100 feet in the air, the first glob hit some wooden debris on the ground and you could hear it snap, that's when everybody started running for their lives. Very dark also could barely see anything.
Damn man...i played Pro football 3 years and the way you described that, sounds cool as hell (though dangerous!) !!! Respect ;)
Why would you boom pump a front porch on level ground? I've never seen it done with a boom that Damn high for a form that's on level ground.I've always seen it pumped from a ground level hose inline to the truck.
They're hiring CGI as concrete workers now? Crap. All the jobs are being automated.
Not in Australia
Does BC require a ticket to operate these pump hoses like welding for spec?
thank you, I work around those guys often, will keep this in mind
I was the hose man on a poured wall crew for 25 years it get a little sketchy sometimes when you're walking on top of 2 inch forms 20 feet in the air lol. After the poor the pump truck driver clears the hose by wadding up paper and blasting it out. I would hold the hose while he was doing it so the concrete left in the hose wouldn't spray all over the job site. When the paper finally cleared the end of the hose the hose would kick like a mule. I had all I could do to keep ahold of it.
In short, using a hose with a coupler, instead of a collapsible hose, allowed the hose to maintain its shape, and air was allowed to displace the concrete. Further, the coupler acts like a weighted projectile when air pockets come through the line.
His family should sue everybody, especially the NFL
We once had that happen at work. We were filling wheel barrels and running them into different apartments in the building. We had a "lid" on the end so that we could stop it from running out when switching wheel barrels. Suddenly the lid "exploded open" and the three of us where thrown around. The blast was so loud it was heard far away. It also fucked up the apartment we were felling from the window in. Scary stuff. Ive never truly felt safe working with it after that.
I witnessed a near miss on a rail construction project. The hose struck a panel a guy was carrying- it knocked him flat, stunned and winded him, but it could have been so much worse.
why would a pump be used when that porch and walkway was easily accessible via wheelbarrow or the chute from the cement truck itself?
Ive never been warned of this but have experienced a little bit. Just a couple weeks ago we poured some columns, 1 man on the bagging and 1 poking while we were stood on steel RSJ roughly 1.5 meters off the ground. Im on the poker and the other guy was holding the bagging and exactly this happened but we had a 3" reducer on the end. It almost sent my guy off the steel but he was quick to react and i grabbed him too. It sucks at times where we need to hold the hose in place or be at head height with it etc.
Be safe out there boys and girls
How can the concrete drain back into the pump? In the uk the pumps are alternating sealed pistons in cylinders
The concrete drains out the end of the hose.
How about tell the mixer driver to keep the dam hopper FULL!!!!
Right?
That helps a lot
No shit lol, I was the hose man on a poured wall crew for 25 years walking the wall holding that hose.
I saw a guy working on a tank at my old job get hit by a blasting hose. He went like 10 feet in the air. That sand blew some of his skin off. He didn't die but was critical.
So it was less the hose but more the hit to the head on the ground?
My neighboor was a very experienced floorer, after 35 years doing that (with a stationary mushroom) an accident alike this happened also. the hose smashed into his lower body and splintered his leg. The man in this clip just had a major portion of bad luck. These things happen daily, when you work with it daily it increases the chance on an accident severly. Has nothing to do with inexperience or stupidity. Helmet would have solved it though.
steve78NL
Why isn't the end rigid,
To prevent whipping...
I ain’t ever seen a pump on a patio/stoop or sidewalk 😂
Lol right they must've charged good then.
u mean a boom?
@@matthewstanley1934 nah i think he means a pump in general. you use a damn truck with some wheelbarrows. what are we talking about, 5-10 yards? you dont need a pump truck for that shit
They did not need a pump truck.
Yeah yeah yeah. Here we go again. A bunch of RUclips arm chair quarterbacks. Experts in the field of concrete. Who would have thought, they all muster at the same location. Stfu you bunch of dill weed idiots. We all know you gained your knowledge from pouring a new concrete sidewalk in your 1 bedroom section 8 housing right next to the road. Go back to playing call of duty lmao
0:47 that's why wearing a helmet can save your life!! You construction workers realy pull down the life expectancy for men!
You ever wear a hard hat?
You do realize that the video is CGI don't you??
Most of the time pumps are pouring walls with elevated platforms such as scaffolding. Very little room to move. Sometimes guys are actually tied off to columns and trying to pour in the air
Why go up and over house when you can pull up front and use a chute? Am I missing something here?
What's the Distance of "ONE HOSE LENGTH AWAY" ?
when a problem comes along, u must whip it!
Should I whip it good?
Go Devo
I'm sure even devo wore helmets making the music video
@Steph6n Thanks for your comment. If you turn up both your computer volume and your RUclips volume, this video will play at maximum volume.
aren't pumpers purged before anything?
What ever happened to backing a cement truck into the yard?
Install a closing mechanism at the end of the hose that closes when the pump stops working. That would prevent sucking in air. Or install a pressure sensor near the end of the hose that will automatically turn of the pump if the pressure gets too high.
Some pumps have air collars that do that. The majority of air pockets are due to concrete truck drivers not keeping the pump hopper full and it sucks air right from there.
This happens every day to tradesmen all across this land. But yet you never see a long funeral procession a mile long of fire trucks or police cars stopping traffic for the guy who died. And you don't really hear about it either. And they never call him a hero. But yet they are the ones who have built this country and made it possible for all those Dr. and lawyers and judges and so on and so on to have their really nice places to work and their million-dollar homes. For if not for us, you would still be shitting in a freezing cold or burning hot outhouse working under candlelight. And all those nice little break rooms full of food and drink would only be a dream.
What was the guy's name who died??? How much did he make doing this dangerous job??? How much of a bonus did he get for giving blood sweat and life to the Co.???
I tell you everything in this country is backward and upside down. But in truth, it takes an army of us to keep this country moving along and everybody else working and living really nice. And the guy who died probably made about $16 to 20$ an hour building for people who are making $120.000 or more a year who never break a sweat. And he probably could never afford that home they were helping build for someone else.
Just think that guy had no idea when he woke up for work that morning that it would be his last morning
Great video. Sad to see a life was lost.
We did a large driveway that was exposed aggregate broken into several panels by a one foot wide border of black concrete . We were half way done pouring the black borders when the pump truck hiccuped . My Dad was running the hose while my Brother and I were troweling etc. My Dad held on to the hose when it whipped and it threw him 20 feet into the full brick facade on the house we were building . It knocked him out for a few seconds and sprayed approx
25 lineal fest of brick with this concrete that was black as licorice.
I don’t recall the problem as this was 30 plus years ago but we ended up cutting out the black and replacing it later. I remember the concrete saw cutting rebar the long ways several times which resulted in what were basically long serrated knives that could cut a hand half way off if you didn’t see it. This is a dangerous trade we’re in. Be safe
Safest way to deal with pouring concrete is to not work pouring concrete....
It looks like he was not paying attention and did not have a firm hold on the hose. Freak accident him hitting his head. He is 80% copable for his own death. Meaning, if this is a $10 million lawsuit, his family only gets $2 million.
So was it death by hose whip or was it death by head trauma due to a fall? Those are two drastically different things. The hose whipping contributed to the accident but in and of itself may not have been the mechanism of death.
He fell back and busted his melon open on a large piece of wood.
Wow, feel sorry for him...probably the least paid guy too. And everything that went wrong was totally preventable from using an unsafe hose length, the coupler plus the pump operator not telling the the guy to get clear of the hose. Unsafe equipment and operators are an accident waiting to happen on any jobsite.
You need a pulsing reverse flow pump that engages during clogging!
Those crane pumps are terribly designed
I got slapped by one in the chest a week ago and boy am I feel in it
How are you now?
I hope all of you have HELMETS!
Was this before safety helmets were required on the job site?
Why pump over the house anyway? Is the road underrated.? Seems kinda senseless.!!!!
I kno right? Looks like a 10 yd pour at most. And pump trucks don't come cheap
It would seem to me, that each, & every construction job, “anywhere” should be videotaped, in order to understand certain dangers that may stem from certain elements of destructive practices, & to ascertain how they could be avoided, ... and it should be promoted as public safety issues to the workers, ...
Yes, I know, & realize that some jobs are simply inherently dangerous, just to be in the vicinity of these jobs, ... a main reason to fence off jobs, so that onlookers may safely perceive what some of the workers are doing, ... but instead of only allowing the public to see what workers are doing in/on/near a work place, it would behoove the corporation/contractor/homeowner to see what is happening at/on the job site, .... and perhaps insurance costs would then start to drop as people could see what is actually going on at a site, ...
PREVENTION of future tragedies should be paramount! Video/audio taping sites would allow for examination of facts to determine how to improve safety. That's why all airliner cockpit conversation is recorded on U.S. based companies' aircraft at least.
I worked at North County Gunite and Shotcrete , always accidents nobody reports.
Is this live or a reenactment?
🙏 Deepest Condolences to the Families & Friends of the Deceased ... May he be Blessed to a Better World & Realm 🕯🌻🌿 Thank You for the Safety Warning tutorial ...
Misleading video. The hose didn't kill him, it was a 2x10.
Why were they using a concrete pump and hose that shot up over the house for a ground level porch and walkway?
Was the hose okay?
I’ve seen hose tips whip but never that violently. The operator should not have let his pump run so long to build up that much pressure behind a blockage. I’ve had pump trucks get rock packed when a mixer driver washed out in the hopper with no fresh mud being discharged into the hopper. Operator will sometimes stand the boom up trying to move the rock pack with gravity. If that doesn’t clear the blockage, when the operator brings it back down, if he kicks the pump back on it can suck up any fresh mud that’s been added to the hopper from a new mixer and can built up pressure in the system quickly. But I’ve seen it blow out an elbow or section of pipe more often than causing the tip hose to whip that badly. Of course, that happens more often on pumps with old system in it that’s probably out of spec for wall thickness and due to be changed. Regardless, a blowout from an elbow at the top of an A-framed boom is not a pleasant thing to have rain down in your head. I wasn’t on the job sight when it happened but we had a pump that was stretched all the way out with boom near horizontal to reach the back of a slab one day and the front outrigger punched thru the street. Found out after investigation that a bad storm drain connection had caused undermining resulting in a big void under the street. Concrete hit its limit and gave way, sending the outrigger down and the truck to go ass over tea kettle basically like a man on all fours losing one arm and falling into his shoulder...unfortunately, that means the boom came down. Hard. On top of one if outperform finishers, pinning him under the boom, they dug the mud out from around his head so he could breathe...but it crushed his back and shoulder. He was in so much pain and couldn’t feel his legs that he was asking the guys to put him out of his misery. ...con el matillo. With a hammer. Ambulance and heavy wrecker both arrived pretty quick and got him out. But he’s paralyzed and idk who ended up being deemed liable for the accident. But the bottom line is... STAY OUT FROM UNDER THE DAMN BOOM! ...and away from the tip hose if it gets jammed up.
I had a pump hose wip and hit me in the mouth and bust out two of my teeth. Those hoses have a mind of their own.
Did the hose also Nay-Nay? Or just whip?
Best course Ive taken was Accident Investigation thru the BC Fed. Always multiple factors causing a workplace accident, must investigate to improve workers safety, solid Investigation AF.
Could we see the actual footage?