Textbook

PhotoRobot Safety

30 min·BASIC·Operator|Studio Manager|Network Specialist|Hardware Specialist|Integrator

Safety is the precondition for everything else in PhotoRobot Academy. Before workspace configuration, capture workflows, mechanical assembly, or integration, you read this module. The content is not long — but failure to internalize it can cost injury, equipment damage, or both.


1. Why this module is mandatory

PhotoRobot devices are industrial-grade equipment. They move under power, carry significant weight, integrate high-intensity light sources, and connect to mains electrical supply. The hazards are real — but every hazard documented here has a known, simple mitigation.

This module gives you the safety baseline. Specific devices add their own safety notes (laser positioning, ceiling clearances, mannequin handling) — those live with each device’s installation manual on photorobot.com.

The fundamental rule: if you are unsure, stop. Then call an authorized authority. Hesitation in safety is correct.


2. Roles & responsibilities

Role Safety responsibility
First installation Only an authorized PhotoRobot authority — an approved distributor or a representative of the manufacturer. Never customer staff, even if mechanically experienced.
Daily operation Trained operators following the workspace and capture procedures. Operators may not modify device specifications.
Service & repair Only authorized authorities, using original spare parts only. No third-party replacement parts, no in-house modifications.
Cleaning Trained staff following the cleaning procedure (Section 6). Not children without supervision.

If you are not in the matching role for a task, you are not authorized to perform it.


3. Installation safety

The first installation after delivery is exclusively the authority’s job. Customer staff may observe and learn — that participation is encouraged in Academy practice — but the authority is responsible for completion.

Universal precautions during any installation or relocation:

For mechanical assembly specifics — bolt torque, alignment, calibration — see the device-specific installation manual and module B13 Mechanical assembly (hardware specialist track).


4. Electrical safety

PhotoRobot devices connect to mains electrical supply. Treat them as you would any industrial electrical equipment.

Working area awareness. Every powered device has a defined working envelope. For example, the Robotic Arm V8 has a 32 cm elevator range and a 0-90° swing arm range. Operators must know the envelope of each device they work with and keep themselves and bystanders outside it during operation. Device-specific working areas are in each installation manual.


5. Operation safety

If something feels wrong — unusual noise, smell, heat, movement — stop the device using the mains switch on the Control Unit, then call support. Do not attempt diagnosis while the device is powered.


6. Cleaning & user maintenance

Beyond surface cleaning, all maintenance is service. Service is for authorized authorities only (Section 2).


7. Children & vulnerable adults

PhotoRobot devices can be used by children aged 8+, and by adults with reduced physical / sensory / mental capabilities or lacking operational knowledge, only if they are under supervision or have received specific safety instructions and the operator understands the hazards involved.

This is the section every customer reads and signs off on before commissioning — not a formality, a deliberate barrier.


8. Information labels & device-specific safety

Every powered PhotoRobot device carries information labels. These contain:

Read the labels on your device before installation, electrical connection, and any service. If a label is unreadable due to wear, request a replacement — never operate a device whose ratings cannot be verified.

The latest Control Unit (G7) is a separate-but-integral component shared across these systems:

The Control Unit is built-in to: PhotoRobot Case 850, C850 & C1300, Cube Compact, Frame. Some installations use older Control Unit revisions (G5 or G6) instead of G7 — the safety principles apply identically across revisions.

Device-specific information labels (Case 850, C850 / C1300, Cube Compact, Carousel 3000, Carousel 5000, Laser Box VI, MultiCam IV, …) are documented on the manufacturer’s safety reference. Always cross-check before service.


9. When to stop

The safety culture in a PhotoRobot studio comes down to one habit: stopping when uncertain.

You stop when:

Stopping costs minutes. Continuing past one of these triggers can cost weeks of equipment downtime or worse.


10. For full reference

This module is a brief operational summary. The canonical, always-up-to-date safety reference on photorobot.com is:

When in any doubt during installation, operation, or service — open the canonical manual. The detail there overrides the summary here.


Module check

When you’re ready, take the module knowledge check for this module. It’s not graded for certification — it’s for you and your instructor to identify any gaps before moving on.

→ Take the module check  ·  5 questions, immediate feedback