Stamping Presses and Press Room Hazards
Automotive stamping plants use massive mechanical and hydraulic presses — some capable of delivering tens of thousands of tons of force — to form sheet metal body panels and structural components. Point-of-operation injuries at stamping presses are among the most severe in manufacturing: partial or complete amputations of fingers, hands, and arms occur when workers' extremities enter the die area without adequate guarding or during a stroke cycle. OSHA's punch press and press brake standards (29 CFR § 1910.217) require specific guarding, two-hand controls, or presence-sensing devices at press points of operation. Equipment that lacks required guarding, or that is operated with guards bypassed, creates both OSHA violations and product liability exposure for manufacturers.
Robot and Collaborative Robot (Cobot) Incidents
Industrial robots in automotive plants perform welding, painting, material handling, and assembly tasks with repeatability and precision that humans cannot match — but they also create hazards for workers who enter the robot's work envelope during programming, maintenance, or malfunction response. Traditional industrial robots require physical barriers (safety fencing) and interlocked access gates to prevent workers from entering the work envelope when the robot is energized. Failure to maintain these barriers, or bypassing interlocks during troubleshooting, is a leading cause of robot-related injuries.
Collaborative robots (cobots) are designed to work alongside humans without traditional safety caging, using force-limiting and speed-limiting technology to stop if contact is detected. However, cobots can still cause injury if risk assessments are inadequate, if the cobot is programmed to carry heavy loads or use sharp tools, or if the force-limiting settings are improperly configured. Cobot injury litigation is an emerging area as automotive and manufacturing plants increasingly deploy these systems.
Paint Shop Hazards and Isocyanate Exposure
Automotive paint operations use two-component polyurethane paints that contain isocyanates — highly reactive chemicals that are a leading occupational cause of asthma. Even a single high-level exposure to isocyanates can sensitize a worker, after which even trace exposures trigger asthmatic responses. OSHA's PEL for methylene diphenyl diisocyanate (MDI) is 0.02 ppm ceiling. Workers in paint booths, paint repair areas, and body shop operations who develop occupational asthma from isocyanate exposure may have permanent respiratory disability — and where inadequate respiratory protection or ventilation contributed to their condition, claims against the plant operator and potentially the paint manufacturer may be available.
Ergonomic Injuries and Repetitive Strain
Automotive assembly tasks — installing components, applying torque, reaching into vehicle interiors, working overhead — involve repetitive motions, forceful exertions, and awkward postures that over time cause musculoskeletal disorders including carpal tunnel syndrome, tendinitis, rotator cuff injuries, and lumbar disc injuries. While OSHA does not have a specific ergonomics standard for general industry, ergonomic injuries are compensable under workers' compensation as occupational injuries. The challenge in ergonomic cases is establishing the causal connection between specific work tasks and a particular musculoskeletal condition — a task that typically requires occupational medicine expert testimony.
Forklift and Materials Handling Accidents
Automotive plants operate large fleets of forklifts, tuggers, automated guided vehicles (AGVs), and other materials handling equipment to move components and materials along production lines. Pedestrian workers struck by forklifts suffer some of the most severe injuries in the automotive industry, including crush injuries to lower extremities, traumatic brain injury, and fatalities. Where a forklift accident results from defective vehicle design — including inadequate operator visibility, brake failures, or stability issues — the vehicle manufacturer may face product liability claims. Where inadequate pedestrian/vehicle separation or inadequate driver training contributed to the accident, the plant operator faces OSHA and civil liability.
See also: machinery injury lawyers, forklift and workplace vehicle accidents, and hand and arm injuries at work.
Request a Free Case Review
No obligation · No fee · Confidential · No attorney-client relationship created by submitting