Safety Alert
DistributedSite: Mining Operations — Workshop, Western Australia
Date: 24 February 2026
Alert #: SA-2026-0086
Classification: High — Equipment Failure (Hydraulic Line Rupture)
What Happened
A high-pressure hydraulic hose on a CAT D10 dozer ruptured during routine blade operations in the workshop test bay. Hydraulic fluid sprayed at approximately 3,000 PSI, narrowly missing the fitter who was conducting a post-maintenance function test. The hose had been replaced 6 weeks prior but the replacement hose was not OEM specification.
Why It Matters
High-pressure hydraulic fluid injection injuries can be fatal. Fluid at 3,000 PSI can penetrate skin and cause extensive tissue damage requiring emergency surgery. The use of non-OEM hoses introduces unknown failure points into critical safety systems.
Immediate Actions Required
- 1All recently replaced hydraulic hoses to be inspected against OEM specifications — non-compliant hoses to be replaced immediately
- 2Implement mandatory OEM part verification step in all hydraulic maintenance procedures
- 3Function testing to be conducted from a safe stand-off distance with physical barriers in place
- 4All personnel to review hydraulic injection injury first aid procedures
- 5Parts procurement to verify supply chain compliance with OEM specifications
Key Learning
Using non-OEM parts in high-pressure hydraulic systems introduces unpredictable failure modes. Always verify replacement parts meet original specifications. During function testing, always maintain a safe distance and use protective barriers — assume the system could fail.
Discussion Points for Toolbox Talk
- •How do you verify that replacement parts meet OEM specifications before installing them?
- •What is the correct first aid response for a suspected hydraulic injection injury?
- •Have you ever been pressured to use non-OEM parts due to availability? What should you do in that situation?
Generated by SafetyScribe AI
Report Reference: INC-2026-0144
Approved by: _________________ Date: _________