Overloading of ground oxen is a prohibited operation behavior. Overloading not only has a serious impact on the ground oxen themselves, but also poses great safety hazards. In addition to overloading, there are also huge safety hazards in ultra-high operation. Below, Guanhang will take you to learn about the ultra-high operation of ground oxen.
Many ground oxen do not have an absolute definition of ultra-high operation, but the stacking height of goods is indeed a significant safety hazard. Stacking too high can cause the center of gravity of the goods to be too high, which can easily lead to accidents such as goods tipping over.
Therefore, Guanhang suggests that once there is a large amount of cargo that needs to be transported, the stacking volume should be reduced each time, and the stacking height should be as low as possible under the horizontal view of people, in order to avoid cargo collapse and eliminate blind spots in the view, thereby improving operational safety.
If the goods are a relatively high whole and can only be transported by a ground ox at once, the problem of high height cannot be solved. However, we can avoid the problem of blind spots in the field of vision by changing the implementation method to a pulling method, and this problem can be well solved.