DeWalt 6 ft. Concrete Anchor Strap - D-Ring One End And Web Loop Other End

6 ft. Concrete Anchor Strap - D-Ring One End And Web Loop Other End

Features

  • Temporary fall‑protection anchor point for embedding in poured concrete
  • D‑ring on one end and web loop on the other for choking to rebar
  • Polyester webbing with wear pad for abrasion and contamination resistance
  • Minimum breaking strength of 5,000 lb
  • Rated capacity for user weight: 310 lb
  • 2‑year limited manufacturer warranty

Specifications

Length 6 ft (1.83 m)
Working Capacity / Rated Capacity 310 lb (140 kg)
Minimum Breaking Strength 5,000 lb (23 kN)
Webbing (Strength Member) 1-3/4 in (44 mm) polyester
Wear Strip 2 in (52 mm) polyester
Finish / Coating Specialized coating to repel oil, dust and water
Material Polyester webbing
Standards / Compliance ANSI Z359.18-2017; OSHA 1926.502; OSHA 1910.140
Weight (Approximate) 1.01 lb (460 g)
Return Policy 90-Day returnable
Warranty 2 Year Limited Warranty

A 6 ft. concrete web anchor strap with a D‑ring designed to serve as a temporary fall‑protection anchor. The strap is intended to be choked to rebar and embedded into poured concrete, then cut off when construction is complete.

Model Number: DXFP812006

Project Ideas

Business

Temporary Anchor Placement & Documentation

Offer a service to place and choke anchor straps to rebar prior to concrete pours, then provide labeled site maps and photo logs for compliance records. Includes competent person oversight and handoff training to the crew. Focus on OSHA/ANSI compliance and traceable documentation.


Fall‑Protection Kit Rental for Concrete Crews

Rent weekly bundles that pair these concrete anchor straps with harnesses, SRLs/lanyards, tags, and checklists. Add delivery, pickup, and cleaning/inspection between rentals. Upsell training and on‑site setup as a premium tier.


Concrete Crew Safety Training Workshops

Run half‑day classes on anchor selection, placement, inspection, and cut‑off/patching best practices using hands‑on demo rigs. Include certificate of completion, laminated quick‑reference cards, and optional on‑site coaching during first deployment.


Post‑Pour Cut‑Off & Patch Service

Specialize in safely cutting off embedded straps after project completion and patching the concrete surface to spec. Provide a clean finish, photo evidence, and waste handling. Ideal for GCs wanting tidy turnover and documented close‑out.


Mobile Safety Supply & Compliance Support

Operate a route truck that stocks these anchors and related PPE, conducts quick inspections, replaces out‑of‑service gear, and updates anchor logs. Bundle subscriptions with monthly compliance checkups and emergency deliveries.

Creative

Apprentice Anchor Placement Mock‑Up

Build a reusable training rig with a small rebar cage and plywood form to practice choking the strap to rebar, correct orientation/edge distance, pour sequencing, and post‑pour cut‑off. Great for toolbox talks and new‑hire onboarding. Use strictly as a teaching aid and only load real anchors in the field per ANSI/OSHA.


Concrete Safety Demo Cross‑Sections

Cast a set of thin concrete panels that reveal correct vs. incorrect embedment of the strap (proper choke, edge clearance, rebar size/position). Label each with do/don’t notes to create a durable visual reference board for your shop or jobsite trailer.


Jobsite Fall‑Protection Go‑Kit

Assemble a grab‑and‑go tote for concrete work: several anchor straps, harness inspection tags, a pre-use checklist, marker/flagging for anchor locations, storage sleeves, and cleaning supplies. Label with rated capacity (310 lb) and standards (ANSI Z359.18/OSHA) to reinforce correct use.


Pre‑Pour Anchor Layout Template

Create a printable template and color‑code system for marking where anchor straps will be choked to rebar before the pour (spacing, tie‑off direction, clearance). Include a simple sign‑off sheet for competent person verification and space for post‑pour photo documentation.


Retired Gear Teaching Wall

Curate worn, cut, contaminated, or UV‑damaged straps (removed from service) and mount them with notes explaining defect criteria. Use it for quick safety huddles so crews can spot issues before they hit the deck. Reinforce: never modify PPE; replace per manufacturer guidance.