The hazards on a polyurethane job site are real but predictable: ISO sensitization, confined spaces, chemical burns, fire, and the gun in your hand. This course covers every one of them — plus the equipment landscape your crew will live in — so nothing on the rig surprises you.
After this module, you'll be able to identify the equipment on any Alchatek-style rig, protect yourself and your crew from ISO exposure and sensitization, work confined spaces correctly, prevent the fires this trade can start, and show up to any job site wearing exactly what it requires.
This module opens the same way Alchatek's EH&S team opens every bootcamp: onsite safety is the first core value of this work — ahead of production, ahead of schedule. Three disciplines underpin everything that follows:
The economics back the ethics: a single chemical-burn injury cited in this training generated a $60,000 workers' comp claim. Nothing you save by skipping PPE survives one incident.
Before the hazards, the hardware — a quick map of what you'll operate (each piece gets its own deep-dive module in the Equipment track):
Module 01 taught you the chemistry: ISO reacts with water. That's the reaction that lifts slabs — and the one that destroys equipment when moisture gets where it shouldn't:
The A-side (ISO) is the chemical to respect most. Skin contact causes irritation — but the real danger is sensitization: exposure is cumulative, and your body builds sensitivity, not tolerance. Veterans of the spray-foam industry who worked unprotected for years now react to trace exposure and can't work near the material at all. That's a career-ending condition, and it's entirely preventable with the PPE in Lesson 7.
Crawl spaces, vaults, manholes, pits — this trade works where air doesn't move. The rules are absolute:
And from the Void Filling module, the materials-side fire rule: large confined foam pours are staged in lifts with cooling time — the curing reaction makes real heat.
The injection gun in your hand moves chemical at high pressure. The discipline is the same one firearms teach: treat every gun as live, keep the safety on until the moment of use, and never — ever — point it at a person. Accidental discharge is one of the trade's three recurring accidents, and it's pure handling discipline.
The big three, by frequency:
Every one of the three is prevented by gear you already own and habits that cost nothing. That's the whole course in one sentence.
Score at least 4 of 5 to unlock module completion.