Emergency Shower/Eyewash


Encon Safety Products

Tempered Water Systems

Backed by 50 years of engineering know-how, the Encon Tempered Water System from Encon Safety Products is designed to provide tepid water for emergency shower and eyewash equipment. The failsafe, electrically controlled, operation-blending device provides water that is at a temperature that meets the ANSI Z358.1 standard.


    Speakman.

    SWINGDOWN WASH

    Speakman Co.'s SE-573 is a swingdown eye and face wash that is activated when the user pulls the unit downward into a horizontal 90 degrees over a sink basin. The unit supplies a 3.9-gallon-per-minute flow of water at 30 psi, creating effective flow and pressure for proper eye and face decontamination.

      H.L. Bouton Co. Inc.

      Emergency Equipment

      H.L. Bouton Co. Inc. introduces a new line of Bouton Emergency Equipment. The product line includes shower and wash units to meet any emergency situation, eye and face wash units, combination stations, and shower and drench hoses. All of these units meet ANSI Z358.1.


        Hughes Safety Showers

        Tank Shower

        Hughes Safety Showers Ltd.'s 1200 liter Tank Shower is designed to maintain water at a safe temperature, especially in hot climates. If the water temperature exceeds a safe level, employees could be injured through scalding. Hughes manufactures a range of tank showers with thick insulation, integral chiller units, and reflective sun shields.


          H.L. Bouton Co. Inc.

          Emergency Equipment

          H.L. Bouton Co. Inc. unveils its new line of Bouton Emergency Equipment. The line includes shower and wash units designed to meet any emergency situation, plus eye and face wash units, combination stations, drench hoses, and more. All units meet ANSI Z358.1.


            Bradley Corp.

            Drench Shower

            Bradley Corp.'s new SpinTec™ drench shower meets all ANSI and EU standards for emergency drench equipment and is designed to deliver an even distribution of water. The shower's unique shower pattern rinses at a high velocity resulting in faster removal of hazardous contaminants from the affected user.


              Bradley

              Eyewash Station

              Bradley's On-Site® Gravity-Fed Eyewash station is now designed to be easier to fill, assemble, and transport for hassle-free relocation. Bracket clamps hold the tank securely to the pedestal, and the connection between the tank and pedestal is fully sealed.


                Sperian Protection

                PORTABLE EYEWASH STATION

                Sperian's latest portable, sealed-cartridge eyewash station, the Fendall 2000™, was designed exclusively for the company's new sterile saline emergency eyewash solution to form a 100-percent sterile delivery system. The device features sealed nozzles and tubing that remains sealed until the unit is activated and an activation alarm to signal that someone is in need of help.


                  Haws Corp.

                  PORTABLE EYEWASH

                  Haws' ANSI Z358.1-2004-certified Model 7501 portable eyewash features a gravity-fed design with a fold-down arm that activates water flow automatically. Its compact, 9-gallon tank and high-efficiency irrigation heads provide a full 15 minutes of flushing time at 0.4 gallons per minute. The patent-pending device comes with a wall-mounting bracket and a bottle of anti-bacterial additive.


                    Follow Us

                    OH&S is on Twitter.

                    Join OH&S Magazine on SafetyCommunity!
                    Join us on SafetyCommunity!

                    Upcoming Webinars

                    2/29: GHS will happen…are you ready?
                    We invite you to attend this webinar to see how GHS is being used today in several workplaces to enhance worker comprehension and safety.

                    3/14: 10 Webinar Best Practices. Step-by-step guide to executing a winning webinar
                    By attending this webinar about webinars, you will learn the what, why and how’s of this exciting, collaborative marketing tool.

                    Spotlight

                    For February, OH&S puts the spotlight on:

                    Poll

                    OSHA Region 6 Administrator John Hermanson says the agency assessed the maximum statutory fines, a total of $21,500 for four alleged serious violations, against a small Oklahoma grain company in connection with amputation injuries suffered by two teenage workers. Does this case demonstrate the need to increase the amounts OSHA can issue in penalties?