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Technician crushed to death while repairing lift at Bangkok airport


snoop1130

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A technician, believed to be a Thai national, tragically lost his life today while repairing a lift at Suvarnabhumi International Airport in Bangkok.

 

The technician’s death was reported today, August 13, by several Thai news agencies. It was stated that he was conducting repairs at the bottom of the lift within a domestic passenger terminal of Suvarnabhumi Airport when the lift car descended and crushed him.

 

Images shared by the media showed the victim’s body at the bottom of the elevator. The lift was cordoned off with yellow boards to prevent others from entering the scene until police could investigate the cause of the incident.

 

Airport officials are planning to contact the deceased’s family to inform them of the tragic news.

 

By Petch Petpailin

Photo via Matichon

 

Source: The Thaiger 2024-08-13

 

-  Cigna offers a variety of health insurance plans designed to meet the minimum requirement for medical treatment coverage, with benefits reaching up to THB 3 million. These plans are tailored to provide comprehensive healthcare solutions for expatriates, ensuring peace of mind and access to quality medical services. To explore the full range of Cigna's expat health insurance options and find a plan that suits your needs, click here for more information.

 

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No LOTO of E/M systems, workers take shortcuts and this is how accidents happen. A trained lift technician should know the procedures and also the engineering manager and safety in charge at the airport who should be overseeing the safety of workers on their equipment on their premises.

Edited by freeworld
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15 minutes ago, BangkokReady said:

 

To stop people from taking photos.

yeaaa that and/or selfies for insta. at least it wasn't in the main terminals, so i don't have to worry about ghosts on arrival.   maybe thailand needs more personal injury lawyers to prevent these "accidents" ,

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13 hours ago, OneMoreFarang said:

Are there any security procedures to follow when working on any lift?

Did he follow all those procedures?

If not, then why not?

 

TiT

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12 hours ago, Georgealbert said:

According to the initial investigation, the technician was repairing one side of the elevator when he accidentally dropped a wrench into the adjacent shaft. As he leaned in to retrieve the tool, the counterweight, which was still in operation, descended and struck him, resulting in his immediate death.

Freak accident or preventable?

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12 hours ago, Georgealbert said:

According to the initial investigation, the technician was repairing one side of the elevator when he accidentally dropped a wrench into the adjacent shaft. As he leaned in to retrieve the tool, the counterweight, which was still in operation, descended and struck him, resulting in his immediate death.

Can I believe what I just read? Apparently, while a technician was working in the lift shaft the lift itself was still in use? The person that authorised that insanity should be charged with manslaughter.

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13 hours ago, snoop1130 said:

he was conducting repairs at the bottom of the lift within a domestic passenger terminal of Suvarnabhumi Airport when the lift car descended and crushed him.

 

 

The technician did not think about securing that nobody uses the lift while he was repairing it ...?

Dead because of stupidity .

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14 hours ago, OneMoreFarang said:

Are there any security procedures to follow when working on any lift?

Did he follow all those procedures?

If not, then why not?

 

The safety procedures to follow when working on a lift are the same procedures one should employ when using a Zebra crossing in Thailand

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1 hour ago, thaibeachlovers said:

The lift should not have been in use, so entirely 100% preventable.

 

I thought this was going to be about the technician not engaging a device to stop the lift descending on him while working, ergo the author of his own demise, but no, it's about some absolute violation of health and safety provisions by his superiors.

His superiors are probably clueless.

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Counterweight AKA "whispering death" as you never hear them coming.

In some instances they can close on you at speeds in the region of 2000 feet per minute.

Edited by norbra
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“According to the initial investigation, the technician was repairing one side of the elevator when he accidentally dropped a wrench into the adjacent shaft. As he leaned in to retrieve the tool, the counterweight, which was still in operation, descended and struck him, resulting in his immediate death.”

this clarify that the technician was working on the immobile 

lift adjacent to the active one that killed him. 

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23 hours ago, snoop1130 said:

COVER-PIC-9.jpg

 

A technician, believed to be a Thai national, tragically lost his life today while repairing a lift at Suvarnabhumi International Airport in Bangkok.

 

The technician’s death was reported today, August 13, by several Thai news agencies. It was stated that he was conducting repairs at the bottom of the lift within a domestic passenger terminal of Suvarnabhumi Airport when the lift car descended and crushed him.

 

Images shared by the media showed the victim’s body at the bottom of the elevator. The lift was cordoned off with yellow boards to prevent others from entering the scene until police could investigate the cause of the incident.

 

Airport officials are planning to contact the deceased’s family to inform them of the tragic news.

 

By Petch Petpailin

Photo via Matichon

 

Source: The Thaiger 2024-08-13

 

-  Cigna offers a variety of health insurance plans designed to meet the minimum requirement for medical treatment coverage, with benefits reaching up to THB 3 million. These plans are tailored to provide comprehensive healthcare solutions for expatriates, ensuring peace of mind and access to quality medical services. To explore the full range of Cigna's expat health insurance options and find a plan that suits your needs, click here for more information.

 

Get our Daily Newsletter - Click HERE to subscribe

 

"The lift was cordoned off with yellow boards to prevent others from entering the scene until police could investigate the cause of the incident."

 

This reads like the lift wasn't cordoned off during the lift repair activity, a violation against Murphy's Law.

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