Vehicle-Mounted Elevating and Rotating Work Platforms: DUVALLS OSHA Part 1910 Subpart 1910.67 Vehicle Mounted Elevating and Rotating Work Platforms 2017 Edition
Vehicle-Mounted Elevating and Rotating Work Platforms, 2017 Edition, is the second part of three parts of 29 CFR OSHA Part 1910 Subpart F - Section 1910.66 Powered Platforms for Building Maintenance, (Scaffolds) Section 1910.67 - Vehicle mounted elevating and rotating work platforms, and Section 1910.68 Manlifts, the continuous belt personnel elevator (Paternoster Type elevators) used in construction and mining industries. The Textbook/examples/workbook study guide is published in 8 -inch by 11 -inch workbook size soft cover, fastback bound form. We have included within the textbook manual a current, direct copy of our reference document as a go anywhere reference source document. The purpose of the work is to provide a clear language document in example/workbook format that is subject specific rather than being buried in a mass of very technical legal termonology. The 29 CFR OSHA document we use for our reference is the Government Publishing Office (GPO) of .gov. The 29 e-CFR edition is always a work in progress, thus not becoming law untill published reviewed and published in the Congressional Record. This processis time consuming and may, in spite of countless hours of proof reading may continue to include typographic and spelling errors. However, and before becoming a critic of our government publkshing efforts - try writing millions of pages of text and tens of millions of words dailym without misspelled words or puncuation errors.
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Vehicle-Mounted Elevating and Rotating Work Platforms: DUVALLS OSHA Part 1910 Subpart 1910.67 Vehicle Mounted Elevating and Rotating Work Platforms 2017 Edition
Vehicle-Mounted Elevating and Rotating Work Platforms, 2017 Edition, is the second part of three parts of 29 CFR OSHA Part 1910 Subpart F - Section 1910.66 Powered Platforms for Building Maintenance, (Scaffolds) Section 1910.67 - Vehicle mounted elevating and rotating work platforms, and Section 1910.68 Manlifts, the continuous belt personnel elevator (Paternoster Type elevators) used in construction and mining industries. The Textbook/examples/workbook study guide is published in 8 -inch by 11 -inch workbook size soft cover, fastback bound form. We have included within the textbook manual a current, direct copy of our reference document as a go anywhere reference source document. The purpose of the work is to provide a clear language document in example/workbook format that is subject specific rather than being buried in a mass of very technical legal termonology. The 29 CFR OSHA document we use for our reference is the Government Publishing Office (GPO) of .gov. The 29 e-CFR edition is always a work in progress, thus not becoming law untill published reviewed and published in the Congressional Record. This processis time consuming and may, in spite of countless hours of proof reading may continue to include typographic and spelling errors. However, and before becoming a critic of our government publkshing efforts - try writing millions of pages of text and tens of millions of words dailym without misspelled words or puncuation errors.
10.95 In Stock
Vehicle-Mounted Elevating and Rotating Work Platforms: DUVALLS OSHA Part 1910 Subpart 1910.67 Vehicle Mounted Elevating and Rotating Work Platforms 2017 Edition

Vehicle-Mounted Elevating and Rotating Work Platforms: DUVALLS OSHA Part 1910 Subpart 1910.67 Vehicle Mounted Elevating and Rotating Work Platforms 2017 Edition

by James W Duvall
Vehicle-Mounted Elevating and Rotating Work Platforms: DUVALLS OSHA Part 1910 Subpart 1910.67 Vehicle Mounted Elevating and Rotating Work Platforms 2017 Edition

Vehicle-Mounted Elevating and Rotating Work Platforms: DUVALLS OSHA Part 1910 Subpart 1910.67 Vehicle Mounted Elevating and Rotating Work Platforms 2017 Edition

by James W Duvall

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Overview

Vehicle-Mounted Elevating and Rotating Work Platforms, 2017 Edition, is the second part of three parts of 29 CFR OSHA Part 1910 Subpart F - Section 1910.66 Powered Platforms for Building Maintenance, (Scaffolds) Section 1910.67 - Vehicle mounted elevating and rotating work platforms, and Section 1910.68 Manlifts, the continuous belt personnel elevator (Paternoster Type elevators) used in construction and mining industries. The Textbook/examples/workbook study guide is published in 8 -inch by 11 -inch workbook size soft cover, fastback bound form. We have included within the textbook manual a current, direct copy of our reference document as a go anywhere reference source document. The purpose of the work is to provide a clear language document in example/workbook format that is subject specific rather than being buried in a mass of very technical legal termonology. The 29 CFR OSHA document we use for our reference is the Government Publishing Office (GPO) of .gov. The 29 e-CFR edition is always a work in progress, thus not becoming law untill published reviewed and published in the Congressional Record. This processis time consuming and may, in spite of countless hours of proof reading may continue to include typographic and spelling errors. However, and before becoming a critic of our government publkshing efforts - try writing millions of pages of text and tens of millions of words dailym without misspelled words or puncuation errors.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781547005734
Publisher: CreateSpace Publishing
Publication date: 06/09/2017
Series: Duvalls OSHA Textbooks Part 1910 Subpart F Section 1910.67 Vehicle Mounted Elevating and Rotating Wo
Pages: 92
Product dimensions: 8.50(w) x 11.02(h) x 0.19(d)

About the Author

James W DuVall is an Engineering Designer of Process Piping Systems, Potable Water Supply Systems, Non-potable Effluent sanitation pumping systems, including large municipal force main systems, pumping stations, lift stations, and new city layout and construction of water supply systems, streets, roadways, and drainage systems. With the U.S. Army Corps of Enginees (Civil). Professor DuVall participated in Route Surveys, Flood Contol Structures, Levee Construction Interstate Highway Development, Airport Expansion with survey crew teams, then later as Enginnering Inspection. Prior to the years spent in the field, as an engineering student Professor DuVall was employed by General Motors Corporation as an industrial laborer in the automobile production industry, moving quickly into Quality Control, then into Production Foreman of steel heat treating, micro polishing, stamping operation, and open tank plating operations. During periodic model change over down time, Professor DuVall found employemtn in the then very active steel manufacturing and metals industry. While still in high school, and at a youthful adventurous age Professor DuVall work his way to Europe aboard ships carrying Marshall Plan Aid to war torn Germany, and then As Apprentice Engineer and Ships Electrican aboard a damaged 10,500 HP surplus fleet tanker on its final voyage to Montevideo and Buenos Aries overloaded with Texas Crude for the above mentioned South American cities. Where, after discharging its dangerous cargo reloaded its tanks with Linseeed Oil for Capetown, South Africa, and eventually sailed for India, where the once gallant ship met its fate under the wreckers torches.
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