Industrial and Warehouse Test and Tag Melbourne

Industrial and Warehouse Test and Tag Melbourne

Heavy equipment. Harsh conditions. Zero margin for error. Comprehensive AS/NZS 3760 compliance testing built for the toughest environments across Melbourne.

Let's be straight about what industrial and warehouse environments actually look like from the inside. They're not clean, climate-controlled office spaces where a laptop charger sits on a desk all day. They're loud. They're dusty. They're hot in summer and freezing in winter. Equipment gets used hard — sometimes 24 hours a day across multiple shifts — and it gets used by people who are focused on production targets, not on whether the cord on the angle grinder has a bit of wear on it.

Welding stations. Grinding benches. Compressors running all day. Conveyor systems humming through three shifts. Forklift chargers plugged in and unplugged dozens of times a shift. Portable power tools dragged across concrete floors. Extension leads stretched across warehouse bays because the nearest outlet is 40 metres away. Power boards daisy-chained behind packing stations because the production line expanded but the electrical infrastructure didn't.

The dust. The vibration. The oil. The moisture from washdown areas. The temperature extremes around cold storage. The sheer physical punishment that equipment takes in an environment where everything is heavy, everything moves, and nothing gets handled gently. That's the reality of industrial and warehouse electrical equipment in Melbourne.

It's exactly why Industrial and Warehouse Test and Tag isn't something you can treat the same way you'd treat an office or a retail shop. The risks are higher. The conditions are harsher. The equipment is more complex. And when something goes wrong — a faulty power tool, a degraded extension lead, a compressor with a failing earth connection — the consequences are measured in serious injuries, lost production, and regulatory action. Not minor inconveniences.

Industrial and Warehouse Test and Tag Melbourne - technician inspecting heavy equipment
Professional AS/NZS 3760 compliance testing for factories, warehouses, and manufacturing plants across Melbourne.

Why Industrial & Warehouse Environments Are the Toughest Challenge

Every workplace has electrical equipment. Not every workplace pushes that equipment to its limits, day after day, in conditions that would make an office appliance give up and go home.

The Equipment Is Bigger, More Powerful & Draws Serious Current

We're not talking about kettles and laptop chargers here. Industrial and warehouse environments run equipment that pulls serious current — welders drawing 15 to 30 amps, compressors running motors of several kilowatts, industrial ovens and heat treatment equipment, large extraction and ventilation systems, conveyor drives, hydraulic power units.

When this equipment develops a fault, the energy involved is significantly higher than a standard domestic or commercial appliance. A failing earth bond on a 15-amp welder is a fundamentally different risk to a failing earth bond on a desk lamp. The person holding that welder is standing on a concrete floor, probably touching a grounded metal workpiece, and the current has a direct path through their body.

The Environment Actively Destroys Equipment

Industrial environments are classified as hostile under Australian standards — and in most factories and warehouses, hostile is an understatement.

Dust & Particulates

Metal dust, wood dust, concrete dust, grain dust, chemical dust — it gets into everything. Some types are abrasive. Some are conductive. Some are combustible. All of them accelerate wear on every electrical component they touch.

Vibration

Heavy machinery creates constant vibration that loosens connections, fatigues cables, and cracks insulation over time. A plug that was tight six months ago might have a loose connection now — and a loose connection is a hot connection.

Moisture & Washdown

Food processing plants, chemical facilities, and manufacturing environments with washdown procedures. Water, cleaning chemicals, and high-pressure sprays. Condensation in cold storage areas and general humidity take a slow, steady toll.

Temperature Extremes

Foundries exceeding 40 degrees. Cold storage below zero. Warehouses swinging between scorching summer heat and freezing winter cold. These extremes cause insulation to expand, contract, become brittle, crack, and eventually fail.

Chemical Exposure

Oils, solvents, acids, alkalis, cleaning agents, cutting fluids — chemical exposure degrades insulation, corrodes connections, and damages housings in ways that are often invisible from the outside until the damage is already serious.

Physical Damage

Forklifts hitting power boards. Pallets crushing extension leads. Tools dropped on concrete from bench height. Cords caught in machinery. In an environment where everything is heavy and everything moves, electrical equipment takes serious physical punishment.

The Operations Don't Stop for Testing

Most factories and warehouses run extended hours — many operate 24 hours a day across multiple shifts. You can't just shut down a production line for a day while someone tests the equipment. Testing needs to happen around the operation, not instead of it. This requires a provider who understands shift patterns, production schedules, and the real cost of unplanned downtime.

The Scope Is Massive

A typical factory or warehouse might have hundreds — sometimes thousands — of portable electrical items spread across multiple buildings, production areas, storage zones, loading docks, offices, amenities, and outdoor areas. Building a complete equipment register for an industrial facility is a significant undertaking.

The People Using the Equipment Are at Constant Risk

Factory workers, warehouse operators, tradespeople, machine operators, forklift drivers, packers, maintenance staff — they use electrical equipment in conditions where a fault can cause serious injury almost instantly. A shock from a faulty power tool while standing on a concrete floor with both hands on a grounded machine. An arc flash from a damaged welding lead. A fire starting from an overheating extension lead in a dust-laden environment.

These Aren't Hypothetical Scenarios

They happen in industrial workplaces across Australia every year. Regular, thorough test and tag is one of the most effective ways to prevent them.

What the Law Requires for Your Facility

Industrial and warehouse operators carry significant compliance obligations. Let's cut through the jargon and lay out what actually matters.

AS/NZS 3760 — In-Service Safety Inspection and Testing

This is the core standard that governs test and tag across all Australian workplaces. It sets out how equipment should be inspected, what tests need to be performed, what results are acceptable, how tags should be applied, and what records need to be kept. For industrial and warehouse environments, virtually everything falls under the hostile environment classification — which means more frequent testing than standard commercial or office environments.

AS/NZS 3012 — Construction and Demolition Sites

If your facility includes any construction, demolition, or major renovation work, AS/NZS 3012 applies with its own specific requirements — including three-monthly testing intervals for portable equipment and specific RCD requirements.

Victorian Occupational Health and Safety Act 2004

Under Victorian OHS law, every employer and every person who controls a workplace has a legal duty to maintain a safe environment. For industrial facilities, this means:

  • Regular Inspection: All portable electrical equipment must be regularly inspected, tested, and maintained.
  • Immediate Removal: Equipment found to be unsafe must be immediately removed from service.
  • RCD Protection: Adequate RCD protection must be provided on all relevant circuits.
  • Worker Training: Workers must be provided with information, instruction, and training regarding electrical safety.
  • Risk Assessments: Risk assessments must be conducted for electrical hazards in the workplace.

WorkSafe Victoria — Industrial Focus

WorkSafe Victoria pays particular attention to industrial and manufacturing workplaces because they're statistically higher-risk environments. If WorkSafe inspects your facility and finds untested equipment, damaged cords, missing tags, non-functional RCDs, or other electrical safety deficiencies, the consequences can be immediate and significant.

Penalties Are Real — Not Theoretical

Improvement notices. Prohibition notices that shut down equipment or entire areas. On-the-spot fines. And for serious breaches — the kind that expose workers to risk of death or serious injury — prosecution. For a body corporate, maximum penalties under the OHS Act exceed $1.8 million. For individuals, including directors and managers found negligent or reckless with worker safety, imprisonment is a real possibility.

Australian Standards for Specific Equipment

  • Welding equipment: AS/NZS 60974 series — safety requirements for arc welding equipment.
  • Portable generators: AS/NZS 3010 and AS/NZS 2676.
  • Portable RCDs: AS/NZS 3190 and AS/NZS 3760.
  • Electrical installations: AS/NZS 3000 — the Wiring Rules.
  • Machine safety: AS/NZS 4024 series — safety of machinery.

Insurance and Workers' Compensation

Industrial workplaces carry significant workers' compensation and public liability exposure. If a worker is injured by faulty electrical equipment and your testing records show negligence or gaps, the insurance implications extend well beyond the immediate claim — including potential premium increases, policy conditions, coverage disputes, and in some cases, claims being declined entirely. For company directors and senior managers, the duty of care under OHS legislation means personal liability isn't just a theoretical risk.

What Equipment Needs Testing in Your Facility?

Industrial and warehouse facilities have the most diverse and extensive equipment registers of any workplace we service. If something on this list isn't currently being tested, that's a gap worth closing.

Production & Manufacturing — General

  • Portable power tools — drills, grinders, cutters, sanders, polishers, impact wrenches
  • Bench-mounted equipment — bench grinders, drill presses, bench saws, belt sanders
  • Conveyor system components — portable control panels, motors, plug-in sensors
  • Packaging equipment — heat sealers, shrink wrap machines, strapping machines
  • Compressors — portable and fixed plug-in units
  • Pneumatic tool power supplies
  • Hydraulic power units (plug-in portable units)
  • Industrial fans and ventilation equipment
  • Portable lighting — work lights, inspection lamps, floodlights
  • Extension leads and power boards
  • Battery chargers — for tools, forklifts, equipment, vehicles
  • Portable generators and UPS units
  • Testing and measurement equipment
  • Cleaning equipment — industrial vacuums, pressure washers, floor scrubbers
  • Heat guns and hot air tools

Welding & Metalwork

  • Arc welding machines — MIG, TIG, MMA and STICK
  • Welding leads and electrode holders
  • Plasma cutters and spot welders
  • Soldering irons and soldering stations
  • Brazing and heating torches (electronic ignition types)
  • Welding helmets with powered air purifying respirators
  • Fume extraction units
  • Metal grinding and cutting equipment — angle grinders, cut-off saws, bench grinders
  • Sheet metal equipment — guillotines, benders, folders
  • Heat treatment ovens and furnaces

Woodworking

  • Table saws and circular saws
  • Band saws, jointers, planers, lathes
  • Router tables and hand routers
  • Sanders — belt, disc, orbital, spindle
  • Drills and drill presses
  • Dust extraction systems
  • CNC routers and machining centres
  • Edge banders, thicknessers, mortisers

Food & Beverage Processing

  • Industrial ovens and cookers
  • Commercial mixers and blenders
  • Conveyor systems (food grade)
  • Packaging and sealing equipment
  • Refrigeration units, cold rooms, blast chillers
  • Washdown-rated equipment
  • Scales, weighing systems, metal detectors
  • Cleaning and sanitation equipment

Chemical & Pharmaceutical Processing

  • Mixing and blending equipment
  • Heating and cooling systems
  • Filtration and separation equipment
  • Fume extraction and ventilation
  • Laboratory equipment — autoclaves, centrifuges, analytical instruments
  • Dosing and dispensing systems
  • pH meters, conductivity meters, temperature controllers
  • Safety equipment — gas detectors, emergency showers

Cold Storage & Refrigeration

  • Cold room and freezer controllers and sensors
  • Portable heaters used around cold storage
  • Temperature monitoring systems
  • Door seal heating elements
  • Condensation management equipment

Warehouse & Logistics

  • Forklift chargers — the most heavily used electrical item in most warehouses
  • Pallet wrap machines
  • Strapping and banding equipment
  • Barcode scanners and handheld terminals including charging cradles
  • Conveyor and sortation systems
  • Dock levellers and loading bay equipment
  • Portable fans and heaters
  • Lighting including portable work lights
  • Office and admin equipment

Maintenance Workshop

Often the most equipment-dense area — and the one most likely to be overlooked.

  • All portable power tools
  • Welding equipment
  • Grinding and cutting equipment
  • Battery chargers and testing equipment
  • Diagnostic and testing instruments
  • Lathes, mills, and other machine tools
  • Cleaning equipment
  • Portable lighting
  • Extension leads and power boards

Amenities & Break Rooms

  • Kettles, toasters, microwaves, sandwich presses
  • Fridges and freezers
  • Vending machines
  • Hot water systems (plug-in units)
  • TVs and entertainment systems
  • Portable heaters and fans
  • Phone chargers and personal devices

Office, Outdoor & Yard Areas

  • Computers, monitors, laptops, printers, copiers
  • Server and networking equipment
  • Electric gates and access systems
  • Outdoor lighting (portable)
  • Temporary power setups
  • Pressure washers and grounds equipment
  • Extension leads used in yard and loading areas

How Often Should Industrial Equipment Be Tested?

In industrial environments, almost everything is hostile. The testing frequencies reflect that reality.

Location / Equipment Type Environment Classification Testing Frequency
Production floor / factory floorHostile — dust, vibration, physical damage, moistureEvery 12 months minimum
Welding and metalwork areasHostile — heat, sparks, dust, physical damageEvery 12 months minimum
Woodworking areasHostile — dust, vibration, physical damageEvery 12 months minimum
Cold storage and freezer areasHostile — extreme cold, condensationEvery 12 months minimum
Washdown and wet areasHostile — moisture, chemicals, high-pressure waterEvery 12 months minimum
Chemical processing areasHostile — chemical exposure, moisture, heatEvery 12 months minimum
Warehouse and storage areasHostile — dust, physical damage, forklift trafficEvery 12 months minimum
Loading docks and yard areasHostile — weather, dust, physical damageEvery 12 months minimum
Maintenance workshopsHostile — all of the above combinedEvery 12 months minimum
Amenities and break roomsHostile — moisture, heat, heavy useEvery 12 months minimum
Office and admin areasNon-hostile if climate-controlledEvery 12 months
Extension leads (any location)Always treat as hostileEvery 12 months minimum
RCDs / safety switches — push-buttonN/AEvery 6 months
RCDs / safety switches — applied currentN/AEvery 12 months
Switchboard thermographyN/AAnnually minimum
Emergency and exit lighting — discharge testN/AEvery 6 months

Why Six-Monthly Testing Makes Sense for Heavy-Use Equipment

The minimum under AS/NZS 3760 for hostile environments is 12 months. But here's our honest recommendation — consider six-monthly testing for your highest-risk, highest-use equipment. A portable angle grinder used daily on a production floor, subjected to metal dust, vibration, physical impacts, and moisture, is under dramatically more stress than a laptop in an office. Over 12 months, that grinder's cord, plug, and internal connections experience more wear and degradation than most office equipment sees in a decade. The cost of an extra round of testing is a fraction of the cost of a single incident, a single WorkSafe investigation, or a single hour of unplanned production downtime.

Test & Tag Cost Guide for Industrial & Warehouse Facilities

Industrial facilities are more complex than most other environments — there are more items, the items are more diverse, testing takes longer, and the technician needs higher-level expertise and equipment. Here are some general ranges to help you budget:

Facility Size Approximate Items Estimated Cost Range
Small warehouse or workshop (under 1,000m²)50 to 150 items$400 – $1,200
Medium factory or warehouse (1,000 – 5,000m²)150 to 500 items$1,200 – $4,000
Large factory or warehouse (5,000 – 20,000m²)500 to 1,500 items$4,000 – $10,000
Major industrial facility (20,000m² plus)1,500+ itemsCustom quote
Multi-site operationVariesCustom quote

What Affects the Price for Industrial Facilities?

Shift Patterns & Scheduling

If testing needs to happen during shutdowns, between shifts, or during maintenance windows, the coordination effort is higher. We're experienced at working within industrial scheduling constraints — but it's a factor in the overall scope.

Equipment Complexity

A facility with welding equipment, CNC machines, industrial ovens, conveyor systems, and cold storage has a much more complex testing profile than a straightforward warehouse. Each equipment type may require different testing approaches.

Access & Safety Requirements

Industrial sites often have specific site induction requirements, PPE mandates, confined space considerations, and safety protocols. We accommodate all of this — but it's part of the planning.

First-Visit Register Build

If you don't have a current equipment register, the first visit takes significantly longer as we walk through the entire facility and record every item. Subsequent visits are much quicker because we maintain the register digitally.

Getting a Quote

We provide free, no-obligation quotes for any industrial or warehouse facility in Melbourne. For complex sites, we'll arrange a brief walkthrough to scope the work accurately. To give you an accurate price, tell us: (1) the type of facility, (2) approximate size, (3) the type of equipment, (4) operating hours, (5) whether you have an existing equipment register, and (6) whether you need RCD testing, thermography, or emergency lighting included. We'll come back to you with a clear, itemised quote. No pressure. No fine print. No surprises on the invoice.

The 10 Most Common Electrical Hazards in Industrial Facilities

After years of testing in factories and warehouses across Melbourne, we've seen the full spectrum of electrical hazards. These are the ones that come up most often — and the ones most likely to cause harm if they're not caught.

01

Extension Leads Used as Permanent Wiring — The Number One Problem

This is the single most common and most dangerous electrical hazard in industrial and warehouse environments. A 20-metre extension lead running from a wall outlet to a packing station. Multiple extension leads daisy-chained together to reach a machine. In an industrial environment, extension leads face heavy foot and forklift traffic, physical damage from pallets, exposure to oils, chemicals, moisture, and continuous high-current loads. The fix: If equipment needs power where there's no outlet, the right solution is permanent wiring installed by a licensed electrician. Extension leads are for temporary use only — and in an industrial environment, temporary means hours, not months.

02

Damaged Cords & Plugs on Portable Power Tools

Portable power tools in industrial environments take a beating. They get dropped on concrete. Their cords get caught on sharp edges, walked over, pinched in machinery, and exposed to cutting fluids, oil, and metal shavings daily. In a factory where workers are standing on concrete floors — an excellent conductor — and may be in contact with grounded metal structures, a compromised earth connection is a serious electrocution risk.

03

Overloaded Circuits & Power Boards

Production lines grow. New equipment gets added. Over time, circuits that were adequate for the original layout become overloaded. Overloaded circuits generate heat, degrade insulation, and in a dusty industrial environment, a spark from a degraded circuit can ignite airborne particulates — particularly metal dust or combustible dust from wood, grain, or chemical processing.

04

Welding Equipment Electrical Hazards

Welding is inherently electrical — and welding equipment operates at currents and voltages that can kill. Faulty welding leads, damaged electrode holders, compromised insulation on welding cables, and poorly maintained welding machines are a significant hazard. Welding equipment also operates in particularly harsh conditions — heat, sparks, spatter, metal dust, and physical abuse.

05

Forklift Chargers — The Overlooked Workhorse

In most warehouses, forklift chargers are the most heavily used electrical equipment on site. They're plugged in and unplugged multiple times per shift, run continuously during charging, and are often in high-traffic areas exposed to forklift impacts, dust, and moisture. Despite this, forklift chargers are one of the most commonly overlooked items in warehouse test and tag programs.

06

Cold Storage & Freezer Environment Hazards

Cold storage creates unique challenges. Condensation forms on equipment moved between temperature zones. Cables become brittle in extreme cold. Connectors corrode. Ice buildup around electrical connections creates both shock and fire risks. Portable heaters used in and around cold storage add another layer of risk, particularly if left running unattended near combustible materials.

07

Dust-Related Hazards in Manufacturing

Conductive dust like metal particles can bridge electrical connections and cause short circuits. Combustible dust can be ignited by sparks or heat from faulty electrical equipment. Insulating dust builds up on equipment and traps heat, causing overheating. Equipment in dusty environments needs to be properly rated for the conditions, regularly cleaned, and tested more frequently.

08

RCDs Not Installed, Not Tested, or Not Adequate

Some older industrial facilities have incomplete RCD coverage. Others have RCDs installed but haven't tested them in months or years. A safety switch that doesn't trip when it should is worse than not having one at all — because it gives workers and management a false sense of security. Everyone assumes the protection is there. But it isn't.

09

Temporary Power Setups That Become Permanent

During a production expansion or short-term project, temporary power gets set up. The project ends, but the temporary power stays. Months pass. Then years. Temporary electrical setups are not designed for long-term use. Their connections degrade, their protection may be inadequate, and they often don't meet the wiring rules for permanent installations.

10

Battery Charging Hazards

Industrial battery charging — for forklifts, pallet jacks, electric vehicles, backup systems — involves significant energy and generates hydrogen gas during the charging process. Faulty charger connections, damaged leads, and inadequate ventilation around charging areas are all hazards. Battery charger test and tag should be part of your regular program.

What Happens During a Test & Tag Visit at an Industrial Facility?

Industrial test and tag visits require more planning and coordination than most other environments. Here's what to expect from start to finish.

Before the Visit — Planning & Coordination

For an industrial facility, the planning phase is critical. We work with your facility manager, OH&S manager, or operations manager to confirm testing dates and timing, access arrangements, site inductions, PPE requirements, safety protocols, scope of work, and equipment register status. For first-time visits, we often recommend a preliminary site walkthrough.

1

Visual Inspection

Every item gets a thorough visual inspection before any electrical testing happens. We check for cord damage, plug damage, evidence of overheating, water ingress, chemical damage, dust contamination, physical impact damage, incorrect fuse ratings, missing safety features, extension lead condition, and power board condition. If an item fails visual inspection, it gets tagged out immediately with a failed tag.

2

Electrical Testing

Items that pass visual inspection are tested using a calibrated PAT tester. Standard tests include earth continuity (earth bond) test, insulation resistance test, leakage current test, and polarity check. For welding equipment, we follow AS/NZS 60974 testing requirements. Every test result is recorded digitally against the item's record.

3

Tagging

Items that pass receive durable, industrial-grade test tags — not flimsy paper tags destroyed by oil and dust within a week. Tags follow the Victorian quarterly colour-coding system. Items that fail receive a danger — failed — do not use tag. In industrial environments, failed items need to be physically isolated to prevent accidental return to service.

4

RCD Testing

We test every safety switch using calibrated equipment — push-button tests and applied-current tests that inject a simulated fault current and measure the actual tripping current and response time. We test both fixed RCDs on switchboards and portable RCDs used with extension leads and specific equipment.

5

Switchboard Thermography

We scan every switchboard and distribution board with an infrared camera while the board is live and under normal production load. Common findings include overloaded circuits, loose connections, deteriorating breakers, imbalanced loads, corrosion, and hot spots indicating developing faults.

6

Compliance Report

Within 24 hours of the visit, you receive a comprehensive digital compliance report covering every item tested, every RCD, every thermographic image, and every emergency light. The report is formatted for WorkSafe Victoria compliance, insurance reviews, ISO 9001 documentation, customer audits, and corporate governance reporting.

How to Prepare Your Facility for a Test & Tag Visit

A bit of preparation makes the visit faster, more thorough, and less disruptive to your operation.

  • Confirm Access & Safety Requirements Early: Arrange site inductions, PPE, and safety clearances before the testing date. We're happy to complete inductions and provide SWMS.
  • Coordinate With Production Schedules: Let us know when testing can happen — during shutdowns, between shifts, or during normal production with coordination.
  • Clear Access to Equipment & Switchboards: Move pallets away from walls, ensure we can reach equipment without dismantling production lines.
  • Provide or Update the Equipment Register: Share your current register or let us know if we need to build one from scratch.
  • Identify High-Priority Areas: Tell us about problem machines, tripping circuits, or areas of concern in advance.
  • Designate a Site Contact: Have someone available who can answer questions and make decisions about failed items on the spot.
  • Decide on Failed Item Policy: Confirm who has authority to approve disposal or authorise repair of failed items before the visit.

Test & Tag for Cold Storage & Freezer Facilities

Cold storage deserves its own section because the electrical challenges are unique and the consequences of getting it wrong are significant.

The Unique Electrical Challenges

  • Condensation: Forms on and inside equipment when moved between temperature zones, creating conductive paths and causing corrosion.
  • Brittle Cables: Standard cable insulation becomes stiff and can crack and fail when bent in sub-zero temperatures.
  • Ice Buildup: Around plugs, outlets, and connections, creating both shock and fire risks.
  • Temperature Cycling: Repeated expansion and contraction fatigues materials and creates failures.
  • Worker Heaters: Often left running continuously near combustibles without adequate testing attention.

What Needs Testing in Cold Storage

  • All portable electrical equipment inside cold rooms and freezers
  • Portable heaters used in and around cold storage areas
  • Cold-rated extension leads and power boards
  • Temperature monitoring systems and controllers
  • Door seal heating elements
  • Portable lighting used in cold storage areas
  • Handheld devices and scanners used in the cold environment

RCD Testing for Industrial Facilities

In industrial environments, RCDs protect workers from the most serious electrical hazards — earth faults that could otherwise result in fatal electric shock.

Industrial RCDs often serve different purposes and protect different types of equipment than those in commercial or residential settings: high-current circuits supplying machinery and production equipment, three-phase circuits with higher fault energy levels, circuits in hazardous environments, and portable RCDs used with extension leads and temporary power setups.

Portable RCDs in Industrial Settings

Many industrial facilities use portable RCDs — plug-in devices that provide RCD protection for equipment connected through extension leads or temporary power setups. These are heavily used, often poorly maintained, and frequently overlooked. Portable RCDs need the same rigorous testing as fixed RCDs — push-button and applied-current testing — because they're providing the same life-safety protection. If a portable RCD fails to trip when a worker uses a faulty power tool, the consequence is the same as a fixed RCD failing. Someone gets hurt.

Test & Tag for Welding Equipment

Welding equipment deserves special attention because it operates at high currents, in harsh conditions, and the consequences of failure are severe.

What Needs Testing

  • The welding machine itself — earth continuity, insulation resistance, leakage current
  • Welding leads and cables — insulation integrity, conductor continuity, mechanical condition
  • Electrode holders — insulation, mechanical condition, jaw alignment
  • Earth clamps — continuity, mechanical condition, clamp integrity
  • Wire feed units (MIG) — electrical safety of the unit and its connections
  • Gas equipment associated with TIG welding — electrical components of gas solenoids and flow meters
  • Welding helmets with powered air — electrical safety of the PAPR unit and its charger

Why Specialist Knowledge Matters

Welding equipment doesn't fit neatly into standard test and tag procedures. The testing needs to account for the specific characteristics of welding circuits — including the open-circuit voltage, the duty cycle, and the operating environment. Our technicians understand these requirements and test welding equipment to the relevant Australian standards.

Test & Tag for 24/7 Operations

If your facility runs around the clock, testing needs to happen without stopping the operation. Here's how we handle it.

Option 1: Shift-by-Shift Testing

We work through the facility area by area, testing during periods of lower activity — during shift handovers, scheduled breaks, or maintenance windows. Production doesn't stop. We work around it.

Option 2: Rolling Area Testing

We test one area at a time, isolating and testing that section while production continues in other areas. This requires coordination with production scheduling but allows us to work with minimal disruption.

Option 3: Planned Shutdown Testing

If your facility has scheduled shutdowns — annual maintenance periods, holiday shutdowns, or equipment overhaul windows — we schedule testing during these periods when the facility is already offline.

Option 4: After-Hours & Weekend Testing

For facilities where even partial disruption during production hours isn't acceptable, we can test after hours or on weekends. Particularly common for warehouses and distribution centres.

What Happens If You Don't Test?

Nobody wants to think about the worst-case scenario. But here's what's actually at stake when industrial and warehouse facilities neglect their test and tag obligations.

WorkSafe Victoria Enforcement

Improvement notices. Prohibition notices shutting down equipment or entire areas. On-the-spot fines. For serious breaches, penalties can exceed $1.8 million for companies. Individuals can face imprisonment.

Production Downtime

An electrical fault that takes out a production line costs lost production, missed deadlines, wasted materials, overtime to catch up, and potential contractual penalties. A single hour of unplanned downtime can cost thousands.

Worker Injury

In an industrial environment, the severity of electrical injuries is often greater — higher currents, concrete floors, grounded metal structures, and slower response times if the worker is alone.

Fire & Explosion

Electrical faults are a leading cause of industrial fires. In facilities with combustible dust, flammable chemicals, or large quantities of combustible materials, an electrical fault can trigger catastrophic damage.

Insurance & Legal Exposure

Workers' compensation claims, common law claims, regulatory prosecution, insurance disputes, and civil litigation. For company directors, personal criminal liability is a real possibility if negligence is established.

Reputation & Contracts

For manufacturers and warehouses that supply major retailers or operate under quality certifications, a serious safety incident can result in loss of contracts, suspension of certifications, and long-term reputational damage.

Switchboard Thermography for Industrial Facilities

We've mentioned thermography several times already, but for industrial facilities, it deserves its own emphasis. Industrial switchboards are the most heavily loaded and most stressed switchboards in any building type. They're running high-current production equipment, large motors and drives, welding equipment, compressors, high-bay lighting, conveyor systems, and cold storage — all at once.

What Thermography Catches That Nothing Else Can

  • Hot connections: Invisible from the outside but indicating loose or corroded joints generating heat and getting worse.
  • Overloaded breakers: Running above their rated capacity without tripping.
  • Deteriorating insulation: On busbars and connections that won't show up in standard testing.
  • Load imbalances: Stressing one phase while under-utilising others, common in facilities with large single-phase loads.
  • Developing faults: Temperature anomalies that haven't caused a tripping event yet but will if left unaddressed.

Six-Monthly Thermography for High-Load Boards

For high-load industrial boards, boards running near capacity, or facilities that have experienced electrical issues in the past, we recommend six-monthly thermography rather than annual. The cost of an extra scan is negligible compared to the cost of a switchboard failure that takes out your production line for hours or days.

Emergency & Exit Lighting for Industrial Facilities

Emergency and exit lighting in industrial facilities faces unique challenges — large open spaces, high ceilings, dusty environments, and exposure to vibration and impacts. We test all emergency lights and exit signs in accordance with AS/NZS 2293, including six-monthly discharge testing and annual full-duration testing.

Why It Matters More in Industrial Facilities

In a large warehouse or factory, where workers might be hundreds of metres from the nearest exit, functioning emergency lighting during a power failure or emergency evacuation is critical. If the lights go out and the emergency lighting doesn't work, workers are navigating through a facility full of machinery, racking, forklifts, and hazards in complete darkness.

Why Industrial Facilities Across Melbourne Choose Us

  • We Understand Industrial Environments: Our technicians have extensive experience working in factories, warehouses, manufacturing plants, and processing facilities across Melbourne. They hold relevant safety certifications and construction induction cards.
  • Full Range of Industrial Equipment: From a 30-amp welding machine to a hand-held barcode scanner. From a conveyor motor to a forklift charger. We build a complete equipment register covering every area and every item.
  • Combined Services, Single Visit: Test and tag, RCD testing, switchboard thermography, and emergency lighting — all done in one coordinated project with one consolidated report.
  • We Work Around Your Operations: We understand that stopping a production line costs money. We work around your shift patterns, maintenance schedules, and production priorities.
  • Detailed, Actionable Reports: Specific readings, thermographic images, clear recommendations, and an executive summary. Ready for WorkSafe, ready for insurers, ready for your board. Delivered within 24 hours.
  • We Keep You on Schedule: Annual, six-monthly, and quarterly testing cycles, RCD testing, thermography, emergency lighting — we manage the schedule and send reminders. Nothing falls through the cracks.
  • Multi-Site Capability: Operating across multiple locations? We coordinate testing across all your sites with consistent standards, consistent reporting, and a single point of contact.
  • Transparent Pricing: Clear, upfront quotes based on the scope of work. No hidden extras for after-hours work or site inductions. What we quote is what you pay.

Industries We Service

Manufacturing

  • Metal fabrication and engineering workshops
  • Plastics and rubber manufacturing
  • Food and beverage manufacturing
  • Pharmaceutical and chemical manufacturing
  • Textile and garment manufacturing
  • Timber and woodworking manufacturing
  • Packaging and printing facilities
  • Electronics manufacturing and assembly
  • Automotive parts manufacturing

Warehousing & Logistics

  • Distribution centres and fulfilment warehouses
  • Third-party logistics providers
  • Cold storage and refrigerated warehousing
  • Import and export warehousing
  • E-commerce fulfilment centres
  • Freight and transport depots

Other Industrial

  • Recycling and waste processing facilities
  • Mining and quarrying support facilities
  • Water treatment and utilities
  • Agricultural processing and storage
  • Maintenance workshops and service centres
  • Panel beating and smash repair workshops
  • Industrial-scale laundries
  • Data centres

Melbourne-Wide Service Areas

We service industrial and warehouse facilities across the entire Melbourne metropolitan area and surrounds. No facility is too small. No site is too large.

Area Suburbs Covered
CBD & Inner CityMelbourne CBD, Southbank, Docklands, West Melbourne, North Melbourne, Fishermans Bend
Inner NorthNorthcote, Thornbury, Preston, Brunswick, Coburg, Pascoe Vale, Reservoir
Inner EastRichmond, Hawthorn, Abbotsford, Collingwood, Clifton Hill
South East IndustrialClayton, Mulgrave, Dandenong, Scoresby, Knoxfield, Bayswater, Notting Hill
Eastern SuburbsBox Hill, Ringwood, Croydon, Lilydale, Kilsyth, Bayswater North
Western IndustrialFootscray, Yarraville, Tottenham, Sunshine, Laverton North, Altona, Brooklyn
Outer WestTarneit, Wyndham Vale, Werribee, Point Cook, Truganina, Hoppers Crossing
Northern IndustrialEpping, Craigieburn, South Morang, Campbellfield, Thomastown, Bundoora
South & South EastDandenong South, Cranbourne, Pakenham, Berwick, Narre Warren, Hallam
Bayside & MorningtonBrighton, Mentone, Frankston, Mornington, Hastings, Rosebud
Geelong RegionGeelong, North Geelong, Belmont, Lara, Corio, Waurn Ponds

Frequently Asked Questions

Is test and tag legally required for factories and warehouses in Melbourne?

Yes. Under the Victorian Occupational Health and Safety Act 2004 and AS/NZS 3760, all portable electrical equipment in industrial workplaces must be regularly inspected, tested, and maintained. WorkSafe Victoria actively enforces these requirements in industrial environments.

How often should industrial equipment be tested?

All equipment in hostile environments — which includes virtually all industrial and warehouse areas — should be tested at minimum every 12 months. For high-use, high-risk equipment like welding machines, portable power tools, forklift chargers, and extension leads, six-monthly testing is recommended as best practice.

Can you test during production without stopping the line?

Yes. We're experienced at working in active industrial environments. We can test area by area, during shift changes, during maintenance windows, or during scheduled shutdowns — whatever works best for your operation.

Do you test welding equipment?

Yes. We test welding machines, welding leads, electrode holders, and associated equipment in accordance with relevant Australian standards including AS/NZS 60974. Our technicians understand the specific requirements of welding equipment testing and the hazards involved.

How much does industrial test and tag cost?

It depends on the size and complexity of your facility. Small facilities might range from $400 to $1,200. Larger facilities range from $1,200 to $10,000 plus. We provide free quotes with transparent pricing and no hidden fees. Call us for an accurate estimate.

Do you test forklift chargers?

Yes. Forklift chargers are a critical item in warehouse test and tag programs — and one of the most commonly overlooked. We test chargers, charging leads, and associated power connections.

Can you test equipment in cold storage and freezers?

Yes. We test equipment in cold storage environments, including cold-rated cables and plugs, monitoring systems, and portable heaters. Our technicians are equipped to work in temperature-controlled environments.

Do you do switchboard thermography for industrial facilities?

Yes. We scan all switchboards and distribution boards with infrared cameras while the boards are live and under normal production load. For high-load industrial boards, we recommend six-monthly rather than annual thermography.

What happens if equipment fails?

Failed items are immediately tagged out of service with a danger tag. In industrial environments, we also recommend physical isolation of failed items to prevent accidental return to service. We document the failure in your report with clear recommendations.

How quickly do we receive the compliance report?

Within 24 hours of the testing visit. For large facilities with multi-day testing, we deliver the report within 24 hours of the final day.

Do you hold relevant safety certifications for industrial sites?

Yes. Our technicians hold relevant safety certifications, construction induction cards (White Cards), and are experienced in working under site safety management systems. We can provide SWMS, risk assessments, and safety documentation as required.

Can you service multiple industrial sites?

Yes. We work with multi-site industrial operations across Melbourne, coordinating testing across all locations with consistent standards, consistent reporting, and a single point of contact.

Do you provide after-hours and weekend testing?

Yes. We regularly test after hours and on weekends for facilities that can't accommodate testing during standard production hours.

What's the penalty for not having test and tag in an industrial facility?

WorkSafe Victoria can issue improvement notices, prohibition notices, and fines. For serious breaches, penalties can exceed $1.8 million for companies. Individuals — including directors and managers — can face personal prosecution, including imprisonment for reckless conduct.

Do you test equipment in hazardous areas?

Equipment in hazardous areas (as defined by AS/NZS 60079 series) requires specialist assessment. We can test standard portable equipment in these areas and can advise on or arrange specialist services for Ex-rated equipment.

Ready to Get Your Facility's Electrical Safety Sorted?

Your workers deserve a safe workplace. Your operation deserves electrical reliability. Your insurance expects documented compliance. We help you deliver on all of it — in one project, with one report, and one less thing to keep you up at night.

Call 0450 261 948 Book a Free Facility Assessment

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