Vehicle or machinery fire · Second degree heat (thermal) burns
At a glance
Federal OSHA recorded a severe workplace injury
at Nikos Auto Repair LLC, 173 Rockland Rd, ROSCOE, NEW YORK 12776
on — Second degree heat (thermal) burns, affecting the head and neck.
Final narrative
An employee started a car that was in storage for a long period of time and was observing it running under the hood when the engine backfired through the carburetor, creating a flame that burned the employee. The employee suffered a first degree burn to the face and second degree burn to the neck.
An employee removed the spark plugs and was rotating an engine to evacuate condensate from the cylinders. An unknown source ignited the condensate and natural gas. The employee sustained burns to the back of his hands and upper leg area.
An employee was operating a front-end loader when a hydraulic line broke, causing the front-end loader to catch on fire. The employee jumped from the cab to the ground and sustained fractures to the T-6 vertebra and a heel.
An employee was moving two totes of turpentine. Noticing that one of them was leaking, he stopped his forklift and began to look for the leak. The forklift caught fire, and the employee suffered severe burns. He was hospitalized.
An employee was performing maintenance on a machine when part of an adjacent machine caught fire. The employee extinguished the fire and suffered smoke inhalation.
More severe injuries in this industry (NAICS 811118)
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An employee was walking on top of a piece of equipment while engaged in repair activities. The employee stepped onto a rotating impeller shaft of a belt-driven exhaust fan and sustained a partial amputation to their right leg below the knee and amputation of their left hand.
An employee was installing an automobile lift at a client location and put the lift on a safety lock. The employee's right hand was caught in the lift and crushed, causing the amputation of the little finger at the last knuckle and all of his right fingers were fractured.
On April 18, 2025, an employee was cutting the lid off an empty 55-gallon drum using a plasma cutter. The drum originally contained a flammable liquid and residual liquid inside the drum ignited and exploded. The employee was hospitalized with burns to the face, chest, and arms.
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