OSHA 1926 · SUBPARTS R · T · SPECIALTY-TRADE DAILY

Specialty trade equipment inspection software
mapped to the standard for every trade.

The daily pre-operation and competent-person inspections for the equipment most apps ignore — asphalt pavers, pile drivers, steel erection, demolition equipment, drilling rigs, and temporary power — each mapped to its OSHA standard, photo-documented, and audit-ready.

14-DAY · FREE TRIAL · NO CREDIT CARD · SPECIALTY-TRADE TEMPLATES INCLUDED

NOT · GENERIC

Built around the trade standard.

Most inspection apps hand you a blank form builder and nothing for the specialty trades. DigiDocs ships the actual OSHA-mapped checklists — pavers, pile drivers, steel erection, demolition, drilling rigs, and temporary power — with the daily pre-op cadence and a red-tag workflow that matches how this equipment is actually cleared for the shift.

Trade-specific OSHA templates

Six specialty-trade templates ship pre-built — asphalt paver/roller, pile driver, steel erection, demolition equipment, drilling rig, and temporary power — each section mapped to its OSHA standard so the operator sees the citation, not a blank checkbox. No template hunting before a shift.

Daily pre-op cadence

The daily pre-operation check out of the box: schedule the inspection per asset so a missed or overdue check before a shift surfaces as upcoming or overdue on the dashboard — including the re-inspection after an impact, a move, or a modification.

Photo capture on defects

Attach photos to any failed item — a cracked paver auger, a chafed pile-driver hose, a damaged GFCI, a worn drill stem. Voice and video notes capture context that doesn't fit a comment box and follow the asset into the deficiency record for review.

Red-tag on a failed safety item

Fail a safety item and the operator can take the equipment out of service immediately. It's red-tagged across the site, a deficiency logs with the photo evidence, and the asset stays locked until the fix is verified on a re-inspection.

Audit-trail PDFs + share links

Every inspection becomes a PDF with the operator's name, timestamp, photos, and the OSHA citation referenced. Generate a revocable share link so a GC, insurer, or OSHA compliance officer can view the records without an account.

Per-asset history + health scoring

Each paver, hammer, rig, or panel is an asset with its own ID, location, and inspection history. Health scoring blends pass-rate, open deficiencies, and overdue inspections so you can see which equipment keeps failing before someone gets hurt.

Works offline

Installable PWA that opens without signal and caches recently-viewed inspect routes. No signal behind a fresh mat, in a river-crossing dead zone, or inside a structure? Operators complete and submit the full inspection offline — it saves on the device and syncs automatically when you reconnect.

Competent-person sign-off

The inspection records the operator or competent person's name and signature on every check and keeps the history per asset, so you can show who inspected what and when across pile driving, steel erection, and demolition for an OSHA audit.

API + webhooks ready

A public REST API at /api/v1 with bearer-token auth and outbound webhooks for inspection-completed and deficiency-opened events, so specialty-trade records flow into your existing safety or project-management system.

COVERAGE · MATRIX

Equipment we cover.

Every specialty-trade asset ships with the right inspection cadence and the governing OSHA standard referenced on the form. No template hunting.

EquipmentStandardCadence
Asphalt Paver / RollerOSHA 1926.600 / MfrDaily pre-op
Pile Driver (Vibratory & Impact)OSHA 1926.603Daily pre-op
Steel ErectionOSHA 1926.750–761 (Subpart R)Daily
Demolition EquipmentOSHA 1926.850–860 (Subpart T)Daily
Drilling Rig (Auger / Rotary)OSHA 1926.800Daily pre-op
Temporary Power / ElectricalOSHA 1926.405 / 416Daily

Need a template that isn't listed? Custom templates on Professional and above with a drag-and-drop builder and conditional fields.

PROCESS · 4 STEPS

Paper pre-op to audit-ready record.

01STEP · 01

Add the equipment

Register each asset — paver, pile driver, drilling rig, panel — with its location and trade. The right OSHA template loads automatically so the operator isn't hunting for the form.

02STEP · 02

Daily pre-op on a phone

The operator or competent person runs the daily check on a phone — Pass / Fail / N/A per item, photo capture on defects, signature, submit. The whole pre-op in a couple of minutes.

03STEP · 03

Fail takes it out of service

Hit a failed safety item and take the equipment out of service on the spot. It's red-tagged across the site and a deficiency logs with the photo evidence.

04STEP · 04

Audit-ready record

The inspection becomes a PDF with the operator, timestamp, photos, and the OSHA citation. Daily records are retained indefinitely for the next audit or insurer request.

FAQ · BEFORE YOU ASK

Frequently asked.

01

What specialty-trade equipment does DigiDocs cover?

DigiDocs ships pre-built, OSHA-mapped templates for the specialty-trade equipment most inspection apps ignore: asphalt pavers and rollers (OSHA 1926.600 plus the manufacturer's pre-op), pile drivers — both vibratory and impact (OSHA 1926.603), steel erection (OSHA 1926.750–761, Subpart R), demolition equipment (OSHA 1926.850–860, Subpart T), drilling rigs — auger and rotary (OSHA 1926.800), and temporary power / electrical (OSHA 1926.405 / 416). Each template references the governing standard on the form, so the operator works through the actual citation, not a blank checkbox.

02

How does the pile driver inspection work?

OSHA 1926.603 governs pile driving equipment — the hammer, leads, hoses, connections, and the rigging that holds it all together must be inspected before operation. The DigiDocs pile driver template covers both vibratory and impact units: hose and connection integrity, hammer and lead condition, hoisting equipment, guards, and the controls — with photo capture on any failed item. A failed safety check takes the rig out of service on the spot and logs a deficiency with the photo evidence so it can't be quietly cleared.

03

What does a daily steel erection inspection require?

OSHA Subpart R (1926.750–761) covers steel erection — hoisting and rigging, structural stability, decking, column anchorage, and fall protection during connecting and bolting. The DigiDocs steel erection template runs the daily check on a phone: rigging and hoisting condition, fall-protection systems, decking and shear-stud guarding, and the controlled decking zone. Each section maps to the Subpart R citation, photos attach to defects, and the completed inspection becomes an audit-ready PDF with the operator's name, timestamp, and the standard referenced.

04

How do you inspect temporary power and GFCI on a job site?

OSHA 1926.404 and 1926.405 govern temporary wiring, ground-fault protection, and the assured equipment grounding conductor program on construction sites. The DigiDocs temporary power template covers the daily check: GFCI function on every receptacle, the assured grounding program tags and continuity, cord and cable condition, panel and box covers, and strain relief. Failures attach photos and log a deficiency, and the daily record is retained for the OSHA audit.

05

Does it work offline on a phone?

Yes. The inspection runs in the browser or as an installable PWA on any phone or tablet — no app-store download. It works fully offline: operators complete and submit the entire inspection with no signal, it saves on the device — photos included — and syncs automatically when you reconnect. So a paver inspection at the back of a fresh mat, a pile-driver check in a river-crossing dead zone, or a demolition walk inside a structure all go through the moment a signal returns.

GO LIVE · TODAY

Start running OSHA-compliant specialty-trade inspections today.

14-day Professional trial. No credit card. Specialty-trade templates included.

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