FALL CLEARANCES  101

FREE FALL DISTANCE

Free fall is the distance covered before the fall arrest device engages or catches you. This distance varies for a couple reasons. Different devices take longer than others to engage. Your anchorage point also plays a part.

DECELERATION DISTANCE

This is the distance required to fully arrest the fall. Once the device has caught, its energy absorber will require time and distance to stop you. Again, depending on the type of device, this distance can be just a few inches to multiple feet.

HEIGHT OF DORSAL D-RING

This is the typical average height of the dorsal D-Ring on a user’s full body harness measured up from the walking working surface.

HARNESS & D-RING SHIFT +
SAFETY FACTOR

This is the combined amount of harness webbing elongation and dorsal D-Ring up-shift during the entire fall event. It’s recommended to consider this additional distance as a safety factor.

SWING FALL

Swing fall occurs when your anchorage is not directly above you. This hazard is typically most associated with SRLs since you’re able to work much farther from your anchorage point.

The device will stop a fall in the required distance, but the worker may still swing a great distance, similar to a pendulum. This potentially puts obstacles, walls, or even the ground in the path of the worker.

It is recommended to always work within a 30 degree safe zone from your anchor. If you must work farther away than this 30 degree safe zone, you must either transition to a different anchor, or consider using a mobile anchor.

Fall clearance changes depending on anchorage location. With a foot level anchor point, some equipment requires more deceleration distance to properly arrest the fall.