Lockout Tagout (LOTO) is a mandatory safety procedure for servicing or maintaining industrial machinery in the United States and many global markets.
For roll forming and coil processing lines, LOTO applies to:
Main electrical supply
VFD systems
Servo drives
Hydraulic pump motors
Pneumatic systems
Control transformers
Capacitor banks
Improper LOTO procedures are a leading cause of:
Arc flash injuries
Unexpected machine startup
Crush injuries
Amputations
Fatalities
In the US, electrical LOTO is governed primarily by:
OSHA 29 CFR 1910.147
NFPA 70E
This guide explains the engineering principles, step-by-step procedure, verification requirements, and compliance expectations for electrical lockout tagout in roll forming machines.
Lockout Tagout is a formal procedure used to:
Isolate hazardous energy
Prevent accidental startup
Ensure equipment is electrically safe before work
Lock = Physical device preventing energization
Tag = Warning label identifying responsible person
LOTO applies during:
Maintenance
Troubleshooting
Panel modification
Component replacement
Drive servicing
Electrical hazards include:
Main incoming 400V/480V supply
Stored energy in VFD DC bus
Control transformer secondary voltage
UPS backup power
Capacitor banks
Remote power feeds
All energy sources must be identified before isolation.
Review electrical schematic
Identify all energy sources
Notify affected personnel
Determine isolation points
Do not assume single disconnect isolates entire system.
Perform normal machine shutdown via HMI
Stop all motion
Allow drives to decelerate
Never begin LOTO during active motion.
Word-Based Isolation Flow:
Factory Supply → Main Disconnect → OFF position
Lock main disconnect.
If separate control transformer exists:
Lock secondary supply as required.
Hydraulic pump motor disconnect must also be isolated.
Apply personal lock to disconnect
Attach tag with:
Name
Date
Contact details
Reason for lockout
Each technician must apply their own lock.
Group lock box required for multiple workers.
Critical step often missed.
VFD DC bus capacitors may remain energized for several minutes.
Procedure:
Wait manufacturer-specified discharge time
Verify DC bus voltage is zero
Discharge capacitors if required
Hydraulic pressure must also be relieved.
Test before touch.
Procedure:
Use properly rated meter
Test meter on known live source
Test circuit
Re-test meter on known live source
Verify:
Line-to-line voltage
Line-to-ground voltage
Only after verification may work begin.
Locking only control power
Forgetting secondary supply
Ignoring VFD stored energy
Not verifying absence of voltage
Removing another worker’s lock
Using tag without lock
Not isolating remote feeds
Assuming E-Stop equals isolation
E-Stop is NOT energy isolation.
Drives store energy in DC bus capacitors.
Even after disconnect OFF:
Voltage may remain >300VDC.
Drive front panel “Power Off” indicator is not proof of zero energy.
Always measure DC bus before servicing.
Roll forming lines often have:
Main roll former motor
Flying shear servo
Hydraulic pump motor
Stacker motor
Accumulator drives
Each may have independent disconnect.
All must be locked.
If multiple technicians working:
Use group lock box.
Procedure:
Primary authorized person locks main disconnect
Key placed in group box
Each technician applies personal lock to group box
No lock removed until all workers clear.
If testing required during service:
Procedure:
Remove tools
Clear personnel
Remove locks
Energize briefly
Reapply full LOTO before continuing work
Controlled procedure required.
OSHA requires:
Written LOTO procedure
Employee training
Periodic inspection
Documentation
NFPA 70E requires:
Electrical safe work condition
Arc flash boundary awareness
PPE where applicable
Failure to comply leads to fines and liability.
Machine must have:
Main disconnect labeled
Voltage rating displayed
Energy sources identified
Clear labeling improves LOTO effectiveness.
Machine identification
Energy sources list
Isolation steps
Verification steps
Re-energization procedure
Procedure must be machine-specific.
Generic procedure insufficient.
After maintenance:
Remove tools
Confirm all guards reinstalled
Clear personnel
Remove personal locks
Restore power
Test machine operation
Unauthorized restart prohibited.
Employees must be trained as:
Authorized employees (perform LOTO)
Affected employees (operate equipment)
Refresher training required periodically.
Untrained staff must not perform LOTO.
While OSHA applies in US, similar LOTO principles apply under:
EU Work Equipment Directive
UK PUWER regulations
Australian WHS regulations
Global buyers expect documented isolation procedures.
Electrical schematic must clearly show:
Main disconnect location
Branch circuits
Secondary supplies
Control transformer
Emergency stop circuits
Accurate drawings improve safe isolation.
Before opening panel:
Arc flash hazard must be assessed.
Even during LOTO:
Arc-rated PPE may be required during verification.
Do not assume zero hazard before testing.
Periodic LOTO audits must verify:
Procedure followed
Locks applied correctly
Documentation current
Employees trained
Audits protect employer liability.
If purchasing a roll forming machine for US or high-regulation markets, verify:
Machine-specific LOTO procedure provided
All disconnect points clearly labeled
VFD discharge times documented
Secondary supplies identified
Electrical schematics included
Energy isolation diagram provided
OSHA/NFPA 70E references included
Maintenance manual covers LOTO steps
Red flags:
“No written LOTO procedure.”
“Disconnect location unclear.”
“No documentation of stored energy.”
These increase legal and safety risk.
No. E-Stop does not isolate energy.
Yes. Always verify absence of voltage.
Yes. DC bus capacitors store energy.
No. Only lock owner may remove.
No. Lock must physically prevent energization.
Failing to verify zero energy with meter.
Electrical Lockout Tagout in roll forming machines requires:
Identification of all energy sources
Proper shutdown procedure
Physical lock on disconnect
Tag with identification
Dissipation of stored energy
Verification of zero voltage
Machine-specific written procedure
Worker training and periodic audit
LOTO is not optional administrative paperwork — it is a life-saving engineering control preventing catastrophic injury in industrial roll forming environments.
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