Buying a Workstation: What Height Adjustment Option to Choose?
By Joy M. Ebben, Ph.D, CPE
Human Factors and Ergonomic Specialist, IAC Industries, Brea, Calif.
When the time comes to choose a workstation, an important
characteristic to watch for is how much flexibility you need in
making height adjustments. Incorrect working height is often
responsible for the musculoskeletal risk factors—extreme postures
and motions. It’s important to remember that the key term here
is working height—almost always different from the work surface
height because the height of the task depends on both task
performance and the object of the task.
The height of the work surface is relative
to the height of the object being worked on and the task being performed.
If the person is soldering on top of a subassembly that is six inches
high, the working height is the worksurface height plus 6 inches
plus any additional height required for the use of the soldering tool.
Thus the height of the work surface is relative to the height of the
object being work on and the task being performed.
The type and range of height adjustments have a significant impact
on the cost of the workstation. This is why it’s so important to be
sure of your true requirements so you spend your workstation
dollars wisely. There are several different recommendations
for appropriate working height—all of them defined relative to
the user’s elbow height. Typical worksurface height
recommendations are:
- Six inches above elbow height for “fine detail” work such as
proofing documents or inspecting small parts.
- Four inches above elbow height for precision work such as
mechanical assembly.
- Same height as elbow for writing or light assembly.
- Four inches below elbow height for work requiring physical
exertion, such as packaging.
Adjusting To Elbow Height
Some of the ways to manipulate the relative height of the workpiece
in relation to the workstation user’s elbow are to:
- Adjust the chair height.
- Adjust the worksurface height, e.g., cut off the legs, put blocks
under the legs, use the height adjustment mechanism provided
by the workbench manufacturer.
- Adjust the height of the equipment being used by making
adjustments on the equipment itself or by providing accessories—platforms and mechanical lifts to hold it.
- Adjust the height of the workpiece by using a fixture.
All of these approaches call for an appropriate height adjustment
of the other components of the workstation components, e.g. the
chair, footrest or arm support.
There are five catagories of surface-height adjustable options
provided by most workbench manufacturers, and each of them
impacts the cost. They are: fixed; fixed, with leg or pedestal
extenders; manual adjustment; crank adjustment; electric
motor-driven adjustment.
Does the workstation fit the tallest user and
does it have a properly designed chair and footrest with sufficient adjustment range?
Fixed. No adjustment is possible. This is acceptable when:
- The height is appropriate to fit the tallest user and a properly
designed chair and footrest with sufficient adjustment range are
provided as needed for others—i.e. for most users.
- Recommended working heights do not vary significantly. For
example, when a sit/ stand operation is not required;
- When the work task is not an intensive, repetitive manual
assembly task requiring fine-tuning of the workstation
configuration;
- When future workstation requirements are not expected
to change.
Fixed, with leg or pedestal extenders. These allow adjustments within a
small range (six inches) provided in 2 inch increments. This option
provides slightly more flexibility than fixed. It allows for increasing the
height of a standard height workbench when these situation occur:
- When it is necessary to accommodate a particularly tall user.
- When a task requires a higher worksurface.
- When the workbench needs to be approximately aligned with
another surface of a potentially different height.
This adjustment option also provides some flexibility to
accommodate tasks performed at a different working heights over
the life cycle of the workstation. However, this is not an easy height
adjustment procedure because it requires tools, and each leg is
adjusted individually.
Manual adjustment. This option allows a wide adjustment range, but
requires removing objects from the worksurface, possibly loosening
and tightening screws, and manually re-positioning the surface.
Adjustment can be continuous or incremental, depending on the
workbench design. A continuous design allows the worksurface to be positioned anywhere along an upright structure, an incremental
design has predetermined locations—i.e., every inch—along a
slotted vertical post where the horizontal surface can be positioned.
Most slotted posts do not require a tool for repositioning the
worksurface, although some do.
Consider carefully the selection of
worksurface height when the workstation is installed.
This option is appropriate when there is a single user, since it
permits properly defining the height for a particular user. However,
if the recommended working height changes, the user will need
a properly designed chair and footrest with sufficient adjustment
range to adapt the relative height of the worksurface for the user.
Give serious consideration to the selection of the worksurface
height when the workstation is installed to make sure that utmost
flexibility relative to worksurface height is provided for the user,
given their chair and footrest height adjustment range. Manual
adjustments are time-consuming and often require tools, thus
making changes between shifts impractical. They are, however, an
excellent method of providing a wide range of height options. For
example, some workstations can be set up for seated operations
and others as standing operations (for a single user) and the range
of options is not restricted to the range of a hydraulic cylinder but
rather the upright structure of the workstation. This option also
makes it possible to easily accommodate individuals with special
seating requirements, like wheelchairs, or very short employees.
Crank adjustment. A hand-operated crank adjusts a worksurface
through a wide range of adjustment—usually 2 inches. The
adjustment mechanism may by hydraulic, screw, or chain-driven.
Electric motor-driven adjustment. Also allows a wide range of
adjustments—up to 12 inches. The adjustment mechanism can be
hydraulic, screw, or chain driven.
Crank-operated and electric motor-driven adjustable benches
provide the most flexible approaches for the design of intensively
used workstations, particularly is sit/ stand or standing operations
are recommended. Height adjustment on the worksurface, along
with a properly designed chair and footrest enable a wide range
of options for adapting a workstation to the needs of an individual
user and tasks. These two options are always recommended for
standing operations where more than one user, working at the
same workstation, perform different tasks that require different
working heights. The electric option is more appropriate than the
hand-operated crank if the height is changed frequently, if the
employee’s strength or rang of motion is limited, or if a “hands-free”
option is required such as using a foot pedal.
These two options are also the most expensive to implement in a
new workstation installation. If you currently do not require crankoperated
or electric motor-driven height adjustment, seek out a
workstation manufacturer that offer hydraulic retrofit kits so you
could modify your workstation investment if warranted in the future.
Pedestal Or Upright?
Once you have decided on the ease and range of adjustability you
require, another question is whether or not you want a pedestal
or upright workstation design. A pedestal design offers less
flexibility—it leaves the factory with a predetermined range of height
adjustability. At its lowest position, for example, it could be set
at 30 inches with provisions for either 6 inch pedestal extenders
to go from 30 to 36 inches, or with 12 inches of hydraulic height
adjustment to go from 30 to 42 inches. This range is set for the life
cycle of the workstation.
On the other hand, an upright system is not necessarily limited
to a factory-set range. The lowest position may depend on the
workstation’s structural design. For example, if there is a hydraulic
cylinder and mounting structure, the lowest possible height may be
23 inches.
For manual height, the lowest position could be at 10 inches. You
can set the lowest height at any position you want as long as it is
not lower than the lowest possible setting. So you can initially install
the workstation with a crank to adjust from 25 to 37 inches, and five
years later change the range to between 35 and 47 inches.
With manual adjustment, it’s possible to position the worksurface
practically anywhere along the support structure, not limited by a
pedestal design, and change its height any time you need to.
Pedestal ensures that all accessories
attatched to the upper structure
will move together with the worksurface
when it is adjusted.
A pedestal design allows height adjustment of an upper structure
simultaneously with the worksurface. This feature ensures that your
parts cup holders, task lights, tool trolley, and other accessories
attached to the upper structure will move together with the
worksurface as you adjust its height.
This simultaneous height adjustment is usually not possible with
upright designs—although there are some limited exceptions. The
requirement for simultaneous height adjustment may be the most
important consideration for your workstation; in this case, you might
choose a pedestal design at the expense of forfeiting the extreme
flexibility of an upright type structure.
Consider the situations when simultaneous height adjustments
would be useful with sitting/ standing or standing operations—when
frequently reached items are attached tot he upright structure or
set on shelves attached to the upright structure. In such a case
you might want to choose a pedestal design offering simultaneous
adjustment of upper structure and worksurface. These tend to be
less stable than other types of workstations and required more
force to adjust because you are lifting not only the worksurface and
objects on the worksurface, but also the upper structure and all
attached accessories and components.
Select a workstation manufacturer who has the expertise to
guide you through the range of available options and help you
define the most ergonomically appropriate configuration for your
present and future applications.
Be sure to ask if they have a Certified Professional Ergonomist
on staff to answer your questions and to provide free guidance in
designing your requirements. One of your primary goals should
be to reduce your employees’ exposure to musculoskeletal risk
factors. Providing the right workstation working height is one
important step in this direction.
