Machine Safety Webinar Series (7-part) 2026 Spring
Explore machine safety in depth
13 February-5 June, 2026
Join us for a journey through machine safety from foundational principles to practical implementation. This free webinar series will guide you through the essential tools and methods to help you clearly identify and structure safety functions during the design process.
Whether you are just starting or refining your approach, these sessions will equip you with actionable insights to enhance safety and compliance.
Each webinar takes 45-60 min and is presented in English.
Once you complete your registration, you will receive direct access links to all sessions in the webinar series - delivered straight to your inbox.
Webinars dates and topics
Functional safety and the new Machinery regulation – an overview - 13 February 2026, 10:00 AM EET
An overall picture of the role of the Machinery Directive (2006/41/EC), and what role the Machinery Regulation (2023/1230/EU) will have.
Risk assessment - an essential part - 27 February 2026, 10:00 AM EET
An overview of what a Risk Assessment (ISO 12100:2010) contains, why it is important, and what is needed to create a safety function that reduces risk.
Designing and calculating a safety function - 13 March 2026, 10:00 AM EET
How to create a proper safety function, the technical solution to the needs found in the Risk Assessment. An introduction to the SISTEMA tool.
News in ISO 13849-1:2023 - 27 March 2026, 10:00 AM EET
A detailed review of the changes in ISO 13849-1:2023, Safety-related parts of control systems.
News in IEC 62061:2021 - 10 April 2026, 10:00 AM EEST
A detailed review of the amendments to IEC 62061:2021, Safety of machinery - Functional safety of electrical, electronic and programmable electronic safety-critical control systems.
Machine safety meets Cyber security - 22 May 2026, 10:00 AM EEST
Due to the upcoming Machinery Regulation and its specific requirements on cyber security risk assessment and mitigation actions, Machine Builders now have an increased responsibility. If the machine has any type of connectivity, this must be considered to be secure as well as safe.
Machine safety, the ISO 14119:2013 and related products - 5 June 2026, 10:00 AM EEST
SO 14119:2013 – Machine safety - Interlocking associated with guards, principles for design and selection. In short, gate sensors used in safety functions on machines. Let’s have a look at how these sensors can be combined with other safety equipment in order to fulfil safety requirements. Ranging from magnetic to RFID switches.
Presenter: Axel Baur Siby Machine Safety Expert
Machine Safety Expert, Phoenix Contact and approved safety specialist by TÜV Rheinland # 3435 / 22 - Machinery-CE Practice