Crane And Rigging Training Safety Videos

Additional information about each crane safety training course is available by clicking on any of the crane and rigging safety video topic links below. All safety training courses are video-based and are available in English and Spanish. Formats include interactive online training courses, online video streaming, or DVD/USB.

Crane & Rigging Safety Training Videos

Importance of Crane and Rigging Safety Training in the Workplace

Crane and rigging operations carry consequences that leave no room for improvisation. A suspended load traveling over an active work area, a rigging assembly configured for the wrong weight class, or a crane operated by someone who has not been trained on the specific equipment type in use creates a hazard scenario where the margin between a completed lift and a fatality can be measured in inches and seconds. SafetyTrainingDirect’s Crane And Rigging Training Safety Videos give construction contractors, industrial facility operators, and rigging crews a consistent, regulatory-aligned way to ensure every person involved in a lift—operators, riggers, signal persons, and lift supervisors—understands their specific role, their specific responsibilities, and the specific hazards that make crane and rigging operations one of the most consequential areas of safety training in any heavy-industry environment. With more than 300 courses in the SafetyTrainingDirect library, organizations have the training depth to address every lift configuration, equipment type, and crew role that a complete crane and rigging safety program requires.

Crane Rigging is not a single skill—it is a system of interdependent decisions that begins with load weight and center of gravity calculations and extends through hardware selection, rigging configuration, inspection, attachment, and signal communication before a load ever leaves the ground. A rigger who selects a sling without accounting for the angle factor, a signal person who uses non-standard hand signals, or a lift supervisor who approves a pick without verifying the crane’s load chart for the current boom angle and radius is making a decision that compounds risk at every step of the operation. SafetyTrainingDirect’s Crane And Rigging Training Safety Videos walk crew members through each decision point in the lift sequence, using realistic load scenarios and equipment configurations to build the kind of systematic situational awareness that prevents the informal shortcuts that cause catastrophic rigging failures.

Crane Rigging Equipment—wire rope slings, chain slings, synthetic web and round slings, shackles, hooks, spreader bars, and lifting beams—must be selected, inspected, and retired based on clearly understood criteria that vary by equipment type, load condition, and operating environment. A sling with a damaged core, a shackle pin that has been cross-loaded, or a hook with a worn or non-functional safety latch is not a minor maintenance issue—it is a failure waiting to occur under load conditions that will exceed what a compromised component can sustain.
SafetyTrainingDirect’s Crane And Rigging Training addresses rigging hardware inspection in depth, giving riggers and lift supervisors the visual reference and the rejection criteria they need to make correct go/no-go decisions before a piece of compromised equipment becomes the weakest link in a loaded rigging assembly.

SafetyTrainingDirect’s Crane And Rigging Training also addresses the communication and coordination disciplines that determine how safely a lift proceeds from initial planning through final placement. Standardized hand signals, radio communication protocols, pre-lift planning meetings, exclusion zone establishment, and the authority of any crew member to stop a lift when conditions change are not soft skills—they are operational safety controls with the same standing as any piece of Crane Rigging Equipment in the lift plan. SafetyTrainingDirect’s Crane And Rigging Training Safety Videos that present these protocols in realistic multi-crew lift scenarios give every participant a shared operational framework that reduces the ambiguity and improvised decision-making that contributes to the majority of crane-related incidents on active job sites.

OSHA’s crane and derrick standards under 29 CFR 1926 Subpart CC for construction and 29 CFR 1910.179 for general industry carry specific training, certification, and documentation requirements for operators, riggers, and signal persons that represent some of the most detailed personnel qualification requirements in the occupational safety regulatory framework. SafetyTrainingDirect’s online Crane And Rigging Training Safety Videos satisfy the formal instruction component of those requirements while generating the completion records and assessment documentation that safety managers, general contractors, and OSHA compliance officers expect to find current and verifiable. When SafetyTrainingDirect’s training is combined with hands-on equipment inspections, pre-lift planning discipline, properly maintained and rated Crane Rigging Equipment, and a lift culture where stopping a questionable pick is treated as a professional obligation rather than a disruption, the result is a crane and rigging program that protects every person who works beneath a suspended load—which, on an active construction or industrial site, is everyone.