Tool Safety · 2–5 min talk

Safe Use of Thermal Cameras

A safety talk focused on thermal camera hazards, including electrical inspections, hot surfaces, elevated work, distraction, interpretation limits, battery safety, and confirming hazards before contact.

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Key Hazards

  • Electric shock while inspecting energized equipment
  • Burns from hot surfaces identified during scanning
  • Falls from ladders, platforms, or elevated inspection areas
  • Distraction while looking at screens near traffic or equipment
  • Misinterpreting thermal images or relying on them alone
  • Battery, charger, or device damage during field use

2–3 Minute Talk Script

Thermal cameras are useful inspection tools, but they do not remove the hazards around the equipment, surface, or area being inspected.

Workers should inspect the camera before use. Housing, lens, display, battery, charger, straps, and controls should be in good condition.

Thermal cameras are often used around electrical panels, motors, pumps, bearings, roofs, pipes, and mechanical equipment. Workers should maintain safe distance and follow electrical or equipment procedures.

A thermal image can indicate heat, but it does not prove a surface is safe to touch. Workers should confirm conditions before making contact or opening equipment.

Workers should not become distracted by the screen while walking, climbing, driving, or standing near moving equipment, traffic, edges, or openings.

Elevated inspections should be done from proper access equipment. Workers should not overreach from ladders, platforms, or stairs to capture an image.

Thermal readings can be affected by reflective surfaces, distance, angle, insulation, airflow, weather, and settings. Questionable readings should be verified before decisions are made.

Safe thermal camera use depends on maintaining situational awareness, respecting electrical and hot-surface hazards, using safe access, and verifying findings before acting on them.

Safety Reminders

  • Inspect the camera and battery before use.
  • Follow electrical safety procedures near energized equipment.
  • Do not touch surfaces based only on a thermal image.
  • Stay aware of traffic, equipment, edges, and walking surfaces.
  • Use safe access for elevated inspections.
  • Verify questionable readings.
  • Protect the camera from damage, water, and heat.

Ask the Crew

  • What hazards are present around the item being scanned?
  • Is energized electrical equipment involved?
  • Could the worker be distracted by the camera screen?
  • Is safe access needed for the inspection?
  • Does the thermal reading need to be verified another way?