June Is The National Home Safety Month
June 7th, 2010
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Yes, The National Safety Council established June as National Safety Month in 1996 with the purpose to educate and influence people to prevent accidental injury and death. Here at Az Cleaning Equipment we believe safety is very important and when you rent or buy equipment from us, we want you to feel confident that you know how to best use it. Here are some guidelines on pressure washer safety provided by the Department of Health and Human Resources. |
Pressure Washer Safety

A pressure washer is a power tool that sprays water at high pressures to clean large, sturdy surfaces such as buildings, farm equipment and roads. Pressure washers may be used more often during disaster clean up when the risk of injury may be higher.
When using a pressure washer, always follow the safety instructions included in the owner’s manual.
Risks
- The strong spray from a pressure washer can cause serious wounds that might first appear minor. Wounds that appear minor can cause a person to delay treatment, increasing risk for infection, disability or amputation.
- The fast, strong spray can throw objects that strike and injure others who are close by.
- Electric shock can occur if the pressure washer is not used properly and if safety instructions are not followed. ·
- Using small, gasoline powered engines can cause carbon monoxide poisoning. Workers should not use any equipment powered by gasoline engines inside buildings or other partially enclosed spaces unless the gasoline engine can be placed outdoors and away from air intakes.
Precautions
- Never point a pressure washer at yourself or others.
- Never attempt to push or move objects with spray from the washer.
- Never use a gasoline powered washer in an enclosed space.
- Always test the ground fault circuit interrupter (circuit breaker or outlet) before using a pressure washer.
- Always plug a properly grounded pressure washer into a properly grounded receptacle.
- If an extension cord must be used, keep the pressure washer’s power cord connection out of any standing water, and use a heavy duty extension cord with components rated for use in wet locations. Keep both the power cord and extension cord connections as far away as possible from the item being washed and away from any water runoff.
- Wear rubber soled shoes that provide some insulation when using the pressure washer.
- Never cut or splice the pressure washer’s power cord or extension cords.
- Never remove the grounding prong from the pressure washer’s power cord plug or the extension cord.
- Always have a qualified electrician check the pressure washer for electrical problems after it has tripped a circuit breaker.
- Never allow children to operate a pressure washer. Keep children at a safe distance when an adult is using a pressure washer.
If you are hurt by a pressure washer:
- Call 911 if emergency help is needed.
- Take care of any wounds:
- Before treating the wound, wash your hands with soap and clean water.
- Remove any object that is in the way of caring for the wound.
- Put pressure on the wound with a clean cloth to stop bleeding.
- After bleeding has stopped, pour bottled or clean running water over the wound.
- Gently clean around the wound with soap and clean water.
- Pat dry and use an adhesive bandage or dry clean cloth to cover the wound.
- Leave unclean wounds open.
Persons who have high pressure spray wounds are urged to get medical attention as soon as possible. A medical professional might XRay the injured area, provide a tetanus shot and antibiotics, or make a referral to a specialist.





1 Comment Add your own
1. power washer | February 10th, 2011 at 7:32 am
Hi there,
Hey wow its amazing to read about house safety and cleaning tools, great
Thanks,
Mark
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