Equipment under control and in the register
Power tool and machinery inspections with protocol and register
Cyclical inspections of the efficiency and safety of power tools, extension leads, and equipment — with labelling, protocol, and a schedule register that the Health and Safety department will accept.
The frequency of inspections depends on the type of equipment, operating conditions, and recommendations — we determine it for your fleet, not with a single slogan.
What we inspect
Fleet of tools and equipment.
- Handheld power tools
- Extension leads and multi-sockets
- Electrically powered machinery and equipment
- Equipment on construction sites and in workshops
- Office equipment within the agreed scope
- Equipment after repair or before approval
Process
From inventory to reminder.
- Equipment InventoryInventory and labelling.
- ScheduleCycle tailored to operation.
- InspectionEfficiency and safety.
- LabellingLabel with the next inspection date.
- Protocol and RegisterDocument for H&S and equipment history.
- ReminderNotification before expiry.
What you get
Order that will pass an audit.
- Equipment register with inspection dates
- Protocol for each item
- Labelling of equipment approved for use
- List of withdrawn or repair-due equipment
- Reminders for subsequent dates
FAQ
Questions about equipment inspections.
How often should power tools be inspected?
There isn't one number for the entire fleet. Frequency depends on equipment category, working conditions (e.g., construction vs. office), intensity of use, and recommendations. We establish the cycle during inventory.
Will I receive a document for the Health and Safety department?
Yes – a test report and equipment register with deadlines. These are documents that can be presented during an inspection.
Do you test equipment on construction sites?
Yes – equipment in harsh conditions usually requires more frequent testing. We adjust the cycle to real-world operation.
What happens to equipment that fails the test?
It is placed on a list for repair or withdrawal and does not receive an approval mark. This prevents it from quietly returning to service.
B2B Contact
Schedule equipment testing.
Provide the type and approximate number of equipment, along with working conditions – we will propose a testing cycle and register format.
Our principle: a testing cycle tailored to real-world operation, not a single number for everything.