The shift can feel under control until the feed rate jumps. A loader tips a fresh bucket, the stream lands slightly off line, and dust rises as boots shuffle on the gritty floor. A small spill forms near the loading zone, then another, and someone edges closer because the line cannot stop for long. The hidden problem is not the mess itself, but the way unstable movement invites quick, hands-on fixes in the tightest places. Daily delays start to stack up, cleanups happen alongside moving parts, and attention drifts from the wider area. Teams often rely on guards, signs, and training, yet those tools do not change how people react when flow keeps surprising them. Continue Reading.
