Height Safety Equipment for Scaffolders
Stay safe and compliant with Height Dynamics’ specialist scaffolding safety equipment, designed for the unique demands of working at height. Our range includes scaffold harnesses, double lanyards, scaffolding tool bags, and fall protection systems, all built to handle long shifts and rugged site conditions. Whether you need a scaffolders harness, a tool bag that won't quit, or compliant fall protection systems, Height Dynamics has you covered.
GRIPPS Mule Bag
- Regular
- $394.95
- Sale
- Now $394.95
- Regular
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Was $494.95
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- per
SALA Force 2 Twin Elasticated Lanyard with Comfort Hooks
- Regular
- $698.00
- Sale
- Now $698.00
- Regular
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Was $879.00
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- per
SALA EZ-Stop Double Lanyard
- Regular
- $419.95
- Sale
- Now $419.95
- Regular
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Was $529.00
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- per
SALA ExoFit NEX Riggers Harness
- Regular
- $785.00
- Sale
- Now $785.00
- Regular
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Was $1,009.00
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- per
SALA Delta Riggers Harness
- Regular
- $419.00
- Sale
- Now $419.00
- Regular
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Was $529.00
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- per
Scaffold Harnesses, Lanyards and Fall Protection
For many scaffolders, the core setup starts with the harness and lanyard system. The harness needs to stay comfortable through the shift, and the lanyard setup needs to make clipping on, moving through the scaffold and progressing across the structure practical without slowing the job down.
Scaffolding work is hard on fall protection gear because the user is moving constantly, changing position and working with tools at height. That is why scaffold harnesses, twin lanyards and scaffold hooks need to be chosen around the way the job is actually done, not just picked as general work-at-height gear.
Tool Bags, Tool Tethering and Scaffolder Gear
Scaffolders also need a practical way to manage tools at height. That includes scaffolding tool bags, tool tethering and kits that help keep tools secure and close at hand while moving on structure.
This matters because scaffolding safety gear is not only about fall protection. It also needs to support the practical side of the work, especially where dropped tools, awkward access and repeated movement are part of the day.
FAQs About Scaffolding Height Safety Equipment
What harness is used for scaffolding?
A scaffolding harness is usually a full body harness set up for movement, repeated clipping on and off, and long hours on structure.
The right harness needs to stay comfortable through the shift and work properly with the lanyard and connector setup being used on the job. For scaffolders, that usually matters more than simply picking a general harness off the shelf.
Why do scaffolders use twin lanyards?
Twin lanyards are used when the worker needs to stay connected while moving from one anchor point to the next.
That makes them a practical choice for scaffolding work where progression across the structure is constant and disconnecting completely during movement is not the goal.
What is a scaffold hook?
A scaffold hook is a larger connector commonly used with lanyards in scaffolding work.
It is designed to clip onto scaffold structure more easily than a smaller standard connector, which makes movement and connection changes more practical on the job.
What is the difference between a scaffolding harness and a general harness?
A scaffolding harness is chosen around the way scaffolders actually work, not just around general work-at-height use.
That means comfort under long wear, practical attachment points and compatibility with lanyards and scaffold hooks matter more once the user is moving on structure for a full shift.
What tools do scaffolders carry at height?
Scaffolders often carry hand tools, connectors and other items needed for day-to-day work on structure.
Because those tools are being used at height, the way they are carried matters. That is why tool bags, tethering and practical storage are part of the safety setup, not just an add-on.
Why use a scaffolding tool bag?
A scaffolding tool bag helps keep tools secure, accessible and easier to manage while working at height.
It also helps reduce the risk of dropped tools and stops the setup becoming harder to manage than it needs to be once the worker is moving through the scaffold.
What fall protection is used on scaffolding?
That depends on the work being done and the way the scaffold is being accessed.
In many cases, the fall protection setup includes a harness, lanyard, connectors and other gear chosen around movement on structure. The important part is that the system suits the job and still works properly once the user is clipped on, carrying tools and progressing through the scaffold.