Req 8b — Heavy-Equipment Hand Signals
Why Hand Signals on a Job Site?
A crane operator sitting high inside a cab often can’t hear anything on the ground below. Radios can fail, and verbal instructions in a noisy construction environment lead to misunderstandings—sometimes fatal ones. The solution is a standardized set of hand signals that a ground worker (called a rigger or signal person) uses to direct the operator from a visible position.
These signals are not optional on professional job sites. In the United States, OSHA (Occupational Safety and Health Administration) and ASME (American Society of Mechanical Engineers) publish the standardized hand signal charts that every qualified signal person must know. When a multi-ton load is swinging on a hook, there’s zero room for ambiguity.
Five Standard Heavy-Equipment Hand Signals
| Signal | How to Make It | Meaning | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hoist | Extend arm upward, index finger pointing up, rotate in small horizontal circles | Raise the load | Unmistakable upward motion—operator lifts the load |
| Lower | Extend arm downward, index finger pointing down, rotate in small horizontal circles | Lower the load | Mirror of hoist—opposite direction, no ambiguity possible |
| Stop | Extend arm horizontally, palm down, hold firm | Stop all movement immediately | A firm, held horizontal arm is impossible to confuse with a motion signal |
| Emergency stop | Extend both arms horizontally, palms down, hold firm | Emergency—stop everything now | Both arms adds urgency; operator must stop immediately |
| Boom up | Point thumb upward, fingers closed, move fist upward | Raise the crane boom | Distinct from “hoist”—affects the boom angle, not the load directly |
Additional commonly used signals include:
| Signal | How to Make It | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| Boom down | Point thumb downward, move fist downward | Lower the crane boom |
| Swing | Extend arm horizontally, point in direction of swing | Rotate the crane in that direction |
| Travel | Grasp wrists at waist, rotate fists around each other | Move the crane forward/travel |
| Dog everything / hold | Clasp hands together at waist | Stop work; secure the load in place |
Demonstrating Your Five Signals
- Practice each signal until it looks clear and deliberate.
- For each one: state what situation would call for this signal, make the signal clearly, say what it means, and explain why using hand signals rather than shouting is safer here.
- If possible, watch a short video of real crane signal persons to understand the proper speed and authority of the signals.
🎬 Video: Crane Operator Hand Signal Training Video | Crane U — Crane U — https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=me2fjrX9hf8