Safety Harness & Lanyards: Guide & Inspection

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Fall Protection · MTN SHOP

Safety Harness & Lanyard Guide: Fall Arrest, Restraint, Positioning & Inspection

Understand OSHA height triggers, active vs. passive protection, harness & lanyard types, connectors, descent & rescue, plus detailed pre-use and periodic inspections with checklists.

On this page — quick navigation

Harnesses and lanyards are core fall protection PPE for anyone working at height. This guide walks through key concepts and practical choices so you can spec the right kit for your job.

  • When do you need a harness?
  • Fall arrest vs restraint vs positioning
  • Harness & lanyard types
  • Inspection checklists
  • Common FAQs

When Do You Need to Wear a Safety Harness?

OSHA height triggers:

Context Height Trigger
General Industry 4 ft / 1.22 m
Construction 6 ft / 1.83 m
Scaffolds 10 ft+ above lower level
Steel Erection 15 ft+ above lower level

Always follow your local regulations and the site’s safety plan if they are more stringent.

Fall protection categories thumbnail

Types of Fall Protection

Passive Systems (Preferred)

Stationary barriers that protect without worker interaction.

  • Guardrails, barricades
  • Safety nets & netting systems
  • Engineered edge protection

Active Systems (Use PPE)

Require tie-off and worker participation.

  • Fall Arrest: full-body harness + shock absorbing lanyard/SRL + anchor (distributes arrest forces; example limits: ~8 kN ANSI / ~6 kN EN).
  • Fall Restraint: lanyard prevents reaching the edge (preferred over arrest when feasible).
  • Positioning: side D-rings + positioning lanyard to work hands-free; backup fall arrest required.
  • Retrieval: raising/lowering for confined space entry/egress.
  • Suspension/Controlled Descent: supported work in suspension (e.g., window cleaning) with a separate fall arrest system.
Passive vs Active — quick comparison
Passive Active (Restraint) Active (Arrest)
Examples Barricades, Netting Tie-off limits reach Harness + energy absorber
How It Works Creates a barrier Prevents access to edge Stops a fall in progress
PPE Needed? No Yes Yes
System Nature Static Movable Movable
Training Level Low High High
Potential Injury Lowest Low–Medium Highest
OSHA Preference Preferred Better than arrest

The ABCs of Fall Protection

A — Anchorage

A secure connection point capable of supporting intended loads with factor of safety. Can be structural (I-beam, concrete) or an engineered connector.

B — Body Support

A full-body harness distributes forces to thighs, pelvis, chest, and shoulders via D-rings.

C — Connectors

Devices connecting harness to anchor: lanyards, SRLs, hooks, and carabiners/connectors.

Body Harness Types

  • 1-Point Harness: dorsal D-ring only; basic fall arrest.
  • 2-Point Harness: dorsal + sternal D-rings; ladder systems often use sternal connection (dorsal is typical primary).
  • 3-Point Harness: dorsal + two side D-rings for positioning. Backup fall arrest required.
  • 4/5-Point Harness: dorsal + sternal + side D-rings and sometimes abdominal D-ring for rescue/suspension.

Connectors & Lanyards

Connectors link the harness (B) to the anchorage (A). Choose the right device for your method:

Fall Restraint Lanyard

Prevents reaching the edge. One end to anchor, the other to harness D-ring. Preferred when feasible.

Fall Arrest Lanyard / SRL

Includes energy absorber to limit forces. Tip: twin-tail designs let you stay tied-off while transitioning anchors.

Work Positioning Lanyard

Connects side D-rings to anchor to hold you in place for hands-free tasks. Always use a separate fall arrest system.

Descent & Rescue

Always have a written rescue plan before starting work. Rope access and confined space tasks may require haul systems for raises, descent devices for lowers, and suspension trauma relief solutions. Adding trauma straps to your harness can relieve pressure while awaiting rescue.

Safety Harness & Lanyard Inspection

How Often?

  • Pre-Use Checks: every time, by the user.
  • Detailed Inspections: every ≤6 months; ≤3 months in arduous use (demolition, steel erection, scaffolding, sharp-edge work).
  • Interim Inspections: as your risk assessment dictates (for deterioration risks between detailed intervals).

Who Inspects?

Pre-use: the user. Detailed/interim: a competent, sufficiently independent person with authority to act (can be internal if competent and impartial).

1) Webbing

Bend 15–20 cm into an inverted “U” and scan inside/outside for tears, cuts, chemical damage, mould, burns, or broken stitching. Remove from service if found.

Webbing inspection

2) Stitching

Check for missing, torn, loose, pulled, or stretched stitches. If the stitch pattern is compromised, remove from service.

Stitching inspection

3) Hardware

Hooks/carabiners/buckles must open smoothly and auto-close/lock fully. Also check for chips, corrosion, cracks, dents, sharp edges, or heat damage.

Hardware inspection

4) Labels

If labels are missing or illegible, the equipment is unusable. Remove from service.

5) Energy Absorber

Check pouch for tears/burns; stitching where attached; and deployment indicators. If deployed or damaged, remove from service.

Energy absorber inspection

6) Cable · 7) Rope

Cable: look for broken wires, separation, corrosion, discoloration. Rope: tears, burns, mould, abrasion, unsplicing, discoloration. Remove if compromised.

Cable and rope inspection
Lanyard hardware examples
MTN SHOP MTN TIP

Choose restraint whenever practical to prevent reaching the edge. If you must use arrest, calculate total fall clearance (free fall + deceleration + harness stretch + D-ring shift + safety factor) and verify anchor capacity. Document inspections and retire questionable gear immediately.

Frequently Asked Questions

1) What does a safety harness with a lanyard do?
It secures the wearer and distributes fall arrest forces over the thighs, pelvis, waist, chest, and shoulders, providing attachment points (D-rings) to integrate with a complete personal fall protection system.
2) How long can a person be suspended in a harness?
Loss of consciousness can occur within minutes after a fall; serious outcomes can occur in <30 minutes. Always plan prompt rescue and consider trauma relief straps.
3) What is suspension trauma?
A physiological response to motionless vertical suspension; leg straps can impede blood flow leading to nausea, unconsciousness, and potentially death. Use relief straps and ensure rapid rescue procedures.
4) What is the purpose of a suspension relief strap?
To let the suspended worker off-load leg strap pressure using leg muscles, restoring circulation and extending tolerance while awaiting rescue—especially important in remote access work.
5) What is the capacity of a safety harness?
Model-specific; many systems are designed for approximately 59–140 kg under ANSI. Always verify the labeled capacity of your harness and system components.
6) How many years is PPE good for?
Service life depends on manufacturer guidance, use, and care. Historical rules of thumb (e.g., 5 years) are not universal. Inspect regularly and follow the maker’s retirement criteria.
7) How do you wear a safety harness?
Don the shoulder straps, step into leg loops, connect chest/shoulder hardware, and adjust belt/leg/shoulder straps so free ends are secured. Follow the manufacturer’s fit sequence.
How to wear a safety harness
8) How do you clean a safety harness or lanyard?
Wash in lukewarm water with neutral soap (≤30 °C); avoid detergents/solvents/degreasers. Rinse thoroughly and air-dry. Machine washing: 30 °C delicate, no spin, inside a thick bag.

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