Publication result detail

Hand-arm vibration from cutting different tree species using battery powered and petrol engine chainsaws

STANĚK, L.; MERGL, V.; NEVRKLA, P.

Original Title

Hand-arm vibration from cutting different tree species using battery powered and petrol engine chainsaws

English Title

Hand-arm vibration from cutting different tree species using battery powered and petrol engine chainsaws

Type

WoS Article

Original Abstract

The aim of the research was to determine the magnitude of the transmission rate of hand-arm vibration levels onto the operator from using a petrol chainsaw and battery-powered chainsaw, and to specify the extent to which HAV values in these chainsaw types differ from each other on both the front and rear handles. It was also studied whether the HAV levels differ at cutting different tree species. Two chainsaws were chosen for the research with a nearly identical performance but a different type of drive system (petrol and battery). Measurements were made on six for¬est tree species of comparable logs diameter and comparable wood moisture content. All cuts were carried out with using the same type of saw chain and the same type of saw bar. Cutting was at all times made by the same operator. The measurements were in line with standards EN ISO 22867, EN ISO 5349-1 and EN ISO 5349-2 and performed with using an instrument certified for the given purpose. Research results showed that the highest HAV level recorded on the front handle from cutting pine with the battery-powered chainsaw was 8.8500 m/s2. The lowest HAV level (0.7400 m/s2) affected the operator from cutting hornbeam with the use of petrol chainsaw. The results also indicate that HAV levels of the battery-powered chainsaw are higher than those recorded in the petrol chainsaw.

English abstract

The aim of the research was to determine the magnitude of the transmission rate of hand-arm vibration levels onto the operator from using a petrol chainsaw and battery-powered chainsaw, and to specify the extent to which HAV values in these chainsaw types differ from each other on both the front and rear handles. It was also studied whether the HAV levels differ at cutting different tree species. Two chainsaws were chosen for the research with a nearly identical performance but a different type of drive system (petrol and battery). Measurements were made on six for¬est tree species of comparable logs diameter and comparable wood moisture content. All cuts were carried out with using the same type of saw chain and the same type of saw bar. Cutting was at all times made by the same operator. The measurements were in line with standards EN ISO 22867, EN ISO 5349-1 and EN ISO 5349-2 and performed with using an instrument certified for the given purpose. Research results showed that the highest HAV level recorded on the front handle from cutting pine with the battery-powered chainsaw was 8.8500 m/s2. The lowest HAV level (0.7400 m/s2) affected the operator from cutting hornbeam with the use of petrol chainsaw. The results also indicate that HAV levels of the battery-powered chainsaw are higher than those recorded in the petrol chainsaw.

Keywords

HAV; battery-powered chainsaw; petrol chainsaw; wood density; occupational hygiene; forestry

Key words in English

HAV; battery-powered chainsaw; petrol chainsaw; wood density; occupational hygiene; forestry

Authors

STANĚK, L.; MERGL, V.; NEVRKLA, P.

Released

30.04.2025

Publisher

Sciendo

Location

Warsaw, Poland

ISBN

2454-034X

Periodical

Central European Forestry Journal

Volume

71

Number

3

State

Slovak Republic

Pages from

196

Pages to

206

Pages count

10

URL

BibTex

@article{BUT198414,
  author="STANĚK, L. and MERGL, V. and NEVRKLA, P.",
  title="Hand-arm vibration from cutting different tree species using battery powered and petrol engine chainsaws",
  journal="Central European Forestry Journal",
  year="2025",
  volume="71",
  number="3",
  pages="196--206",
  doi="10.2478/forj-2025-0003",
  issn="2454-034X",
  url="https://web.nlcsk.org/central-european-forestry-journal-volume-71-03-2025/"
}