The natural angle between the hand and handle and the effect of handle orientation on wrist radial/ulnar deviation during maximal push exertions

Justin G. Young, Jia-Hua Lin, Chien-Chi Chang, Raymond W. McGorry

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The purpose of this experiment was to quantify the natural angle between the hand and a handle, and to investigate three design factors: handle rotation, handle tilt and between-handle width on the natural angle as well as resultant wrist radial/ulnar deviation (‘RUD’) for pushing tasks. Photographs taken of the right upper limb of 31 participants (14 women and 17 men) performing maximal seated push exertions on different handles were analysed. Natural hand/handle angle and RUD were assessed. It was found that all of the three design factors significantly affected natural handle angle and wrist RUD, but participant gender did not. The natural angle between the hand and the cylindrical handle was 65 ± 7°. Wrist deviation was reduced for handles that were rotated 0° (horizontal) and at the narrow width (31 cm). Handles that were tilted forward 15° reduced radial deviation consistently (12–13°) across handle conditions.

Original languageAmerican English
JournalErgonomics
Volume56
DOIs
StatePublished - Mar 1 2013

Keywords

  • manual handling
  • hand tools and interfaces
  • pushing
  • posture
  • equipment design

Disciplines

  • Industrial Engineering

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