Serious Labs has announced that its Mobile Elevating Work Platform (MEWP) Virtual Reality (VR) Operator Training Simulator was approved by the International Powered Access Federation (IPAF) for renewals of its Powered Access License (PAL) Card.
This is the first time, the company says, that heavy equipment operators may renew their license by simulator, without even touching a physical machine.
IPAF has issued over two million PAL Cards worldwide, and its operator training is recognized in over 51 countries. PAL Cards typically need to be renewed every five years.
"This is a major milestone for the safety and training industry," said Jim Colvin, CEO, Serious Labs. "The impact of this approval by such a trusted and esteemed organization as IPAF will make training renewals, and safety overall, more accessible and convenient. That will help save lives, increase uptime, and reduce accidents. The fact that heavy equipment operators can now renew their license through simulation for the first time ever is a testament to the years of hard work by our team here at Serious Labs, as well as to the commitment to safety by the access industry as a whole."
The simulated MEWP PAL card renewal tests existing PAL Card holders through a VR-based replica of the IPAF 3a/3b practical test. Two scenarios go through a pre-use check on the machine, and a practical course, just as if the operator was on a machine in the real world.
Created from the data and results of trials over the course of eight months, the course uses an abridged theory session but the same practical session, based on ISO 18878 that is used in the standard 3a and 3b courses. The trial used experienced operators with a minimum three years’ experience who each held a valid PAL Card.
"It's a mirror image of what you would do with the real machine, but the simulator comes to where you work, rather than you going to where the training course is being held," said Darren Verschuren, international account director, Serious Labs, and former safety trainer with Riwal.
"For large construction projects, or even something like a remote work location, rather than the guys having to travel to a rental depot or training center that might be two hours from their house, they just go to work as normal," Verschuren said. "And an IPAF Training Center can bring the unit to them.
"If you had four guys that needed to renew their PAL card, normally you would lose them for a day, plus travel," Verschuren said. "So you effectively lose four days. Whereas now, we turn up on the site, you'll only lose them from work for about 90 minutes each. That's a significant productivity savings for the contractors. Plus, you're not having to pay travel costs for meals and hotels, and Covid exposure risk is reduced."
Source: Serious Labs