Hello,
I cant help but think that this is all relative to what each individual feels is 'safe' for them.
Personally i would be quite comfortable working with my ladder at that angle and 'footed' by a car, it really wouldnt be a problem for me - i use my own judgement to test the ladder before going up it, and if i feel its a bit dodgy, then i dont go up - simple as that.
However, i used to be a Pro decorator and i used to work in the construction industry so i experienced the 'full blast' of the Health and Safety dept !
My own, and everyone i have ever knowns opinion of the H&S is that they are just a complete bunch of idiots who have absolutely no practical sense whatsoever !
I was a decorator and on some jobs step ladders were eventually banned.
lol, not only for decorators but for all trades.
Try and imagine this : decorators, electricians, plasterers, air conditioning ducters/fitters, carpenters, networkers all working in one banking hall, there must have been 25/30 blokes on the job at one given time.
No step ladders allowed.
Everyone had to supply scaffold, it was complete chaos !
Most of the work you needed steps for was just above head height, so you'd spend half an hour looking for you scaffold in the huge pile, then put it up to reach an extra couple of feet. Everyone was doing this so in the tight corners only one trade could work at a time.
The job went over by months. I heard that in the end, it was a nightmare having cost the constuction company a fortune in delay penalties.
The lads and even the site managers went through everything to try and work out why the H&S dept banned step ladders and it was always the same reason it boiled down to.
Insurance Claims.
There was a huge survey in the construction industry to find out how individuals were having accidents - falling from step ladders was right up at the top.
Fall off, claim an accident - Insurance has to cough up compensation. How do they solve this ? the only way the insurance people know how to - ' right, you can't use step ladders anymore !!'
Complete disaster.
It didnt last long, everyone soon got round to using ladders again, it just wasnt practical - either physically or financially.
It wouldn't surprise me one bit, if behind the Health & Safety was a government department backed and funded by a huge consortium of Insurance Companies.
Carl.