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Safety and maintenance

Safety and maintenance. Unit objectives: Examine safety issues and hazards in the computer environment Identify preventative maintenance tasks for personal computers Identify ways to avoid injury and strain when working with computers Examine proper methods for disposing of computer equipment.

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Safety and maintenance

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  1. Safety and maintenance Unit objectives: • Examine safety issues and hazards in the computer environment • Identify preventative maintenance tasks for personal computers • Identify ways to avoid injury and strain when working with computers • Examine proper methods for disposing of computer equipment

  2. Topic A • Topic A: Safety and hazards • Topic B: Computer maintenance • Topic C: Safe work practices • Topic D: Disposing of computer equipment

  3. Office hazards: floor surfaces • Floors should be level and dry • Carpets should be secured to the floor • Cables and power cords should not cross walkways • Use antistatic mats to protect equipment from static electricity

  4. Office hazards: fire safety • Keep papers orderly • In metal file cabinet when possible • Keep combustibles away from coffee pots, hot plates, personal heaters • Keep working smoke detectors in all areas of building • Keep fire extinguishers readily available for each type of equipment you have

  5. Fire extinguisher classes • Extinguishers list appropriate uses • Newer ones use a picture • Older ones use color-coded shapes • Four classes • A: Ordinary combustibles • B: Flammable liquids • C: Electrical equipment • D: Flammable metals

  6. Fire extinguisher types • Dry chemicals • Halon • Water • CO2

  7. Office hazards: electrical safety • Don’t overload electrical circuits • Label breakers in electrical box • Use surge protectors and UPS • Don’t string together power strips • Don’t run electrical cords or network cables across walkways • Encase cords in a cord protector • Provide good ventilation for equipment • Secure cords out of the way • Can use cable ties, but don’t cinch tightly

  8. Office hazards: air quality • Use fans to keep air as clear as possible • Don’t smoke around computers • Clean computerfans periodically • Place working carbon monoxide detectors around building

  9. Computer hazards • Physical • Electrical

  10. Physical hazards • Use care when lifting and moving heavy or bulky equipment • When lifting, take a balanced stance • Lift with leg muscles, not arms and back • Keep back straight • Grip with entire hand • Bring equipment close to your body • Keep the CRT screen towards body • Make sure you can see where you’re going • Restrain neckties, loose clothing, jewelry, and long hair continued

  11. Physical hazards, continued • Heat: • Laptop burns • Internal components

  12. Electrical hazards • Use care when working with any electrical equipment • Turn it off and unplug it, unless you don’t have an ESD strap • Inspect equipment wiring for defects • Don’t use damaged or frayed electrical cords • Remove metal jewelry, watches, and rings before working on equipment • Do not allow any liquid near equipment • Identify electrical ratings of equipment • DON’T OPEN CRT unless specially trained

  13. Laser printer and copier toner • Toner • Mixture of plastic resin, iron powder, and carbon black • Particles are 10 microns or smaller • Can irritate respiratory tract • Can cause allergic skin reaction • Use facemask and gloves • Clean up spills with special vacuum • Recycle cartridges • Replaceable ozone filters

  14. Incident reporting • Company should have written policy • Handling accidents • Reporting incidents • Proper documentation required for OSHA, workmen’s comp claims, and insurance

  15. Activity A-1 Identifying typical office and computer-related hazards

  16. High-voltage interference: outside • Lightning • Atmospheric conditions that produce lightning • Wind • Radio stations • Citizens band (CB) radios • Police radios

  17. High-voltage interference: inside • Differences in electrical potential • In various parts of the building • Between objects in the building • Currents flow for short periods of time • Disrupts low-voltage network data flow • Electromagnetic fields around equipment • Imperfectly wired electrical connections • Appliances and fluorescent lights • Object movements

  18. Electrostatic discharge (ESD) • Buildup of electrical charge on surface of object • Typically rubber, plastic, glass, other items that aren’t good conductors • Buildup remains until bleed off to ground or static discharge • When objects touch, brief and sudden electrical current flows between them • To feel discharge: 3000 volts or more • To see spark: 8000 volts or more • ESD of a few hundred volts can damage electronics and destroy data • CRTs and TVs produce static charges

  19. Electromagnetic interference (EMI) • Produced by fluorescent lights • Ballast creates electromagnetic field around transformer • Causes phosphorus in bulb to glow • Can produce similar current in nearby objects • Don’t run network cables near fluorescent lights

  20. Minimizing high-voltage interference • Level of interference depends on • Climatic conditions in the area • Proximity to radio stations, power lines, industrial plants • Construction of building • Defenses against interference • Maintenance • Installing ground wires • Using antistatic devices

  21. Shielding and filtering • Shielding • Applies primarily to a network’s cables • Is a refined form of grounding • Used in STP cable • Filters • Electronic devices that permit the normal function of a device while blocking or suppressing other signals • Can place on source or recipient of interference • AC power-line filters, RFI filters, network filters

  22. Activity A-2 Finding sources of static electricity and interference

  23. Topic B • Topic A: Safety and hazards • Topic B: Computer maintenance • Topic C: Safe work practices • Topic D: Disposing of computer equipment

  24. Ventilation, dust, and moisture control • Keep fan openings and ventilation holes clear • Clean with compressed air, computer vacuum, or air compressor • Humidity level at 50% • Clean printers regularly • Rubbing alcohol cleans ink smudges

  25. Printer/scanner maintenance • Vendor publishes recommended schedule and list of tasks • Usually based on printing volume • Ensure suitable operating environment

  26. Activity B-1 Discussing preventative maintenance

  27. Cleaning computer equipment • Wear latex or other synthetic gloves • Liquid cleaning compounds • Dampen, don’t soak cloth • Cleaning contacts and connections • Non-static vacuums • Cleaning monitors, keyboards, mice

  28. Activity B-2 Cleaning computer equipment

  29. MSDS • Physical data • Toxicity • Health effects • First aid • Reactivity • Storage • Disposal • Protective equipment • Spill and leakage procedures

  30. MSDS hazard ratings

  31. Personal protection by rating

  32. Activity B-3 Reading a material safety data sheet

  33. Topic C • Topic A: Safety and hazards • Topic B: Computer maintenance • Topic C: Safe work practices • Topic D: Disposing of computer equipment

  34. Ergonomic workstations Check position of: • Chair • Monitor • Keyboard • Mouse • Document holders • Office equipment • Phones • Other equipment

  35. Laptop safety • Weight • Ergonomic issues • Heat

  36. Activity C-1 Avoiding injury and strain when working with PCs

  37. Topic D • Topic A: Safety and hazards • Topic B: Computer maintenance • Topic C: Safe work practices • Topic D: Disposing of computer equipment

  38. Computer equipment disposal • Disposing of electronics • Hazardous materials • Disposing of used toner and ink cartridges • Disposing of computer equipment • Reusing equipment • Methods of disposal

  39. Activity D-1 Selecting the proper methods for computer equipment disposal

  40. Unit summary • Examined safety issues and hazards in the computer environment • Identified preventative maintenance tasks for personal computers • Identified ways to avoid injury and strain when working with computers • Examined proper methods for disposing of computer equipment

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