Confidential Presentation • SASOL Brandspruit
Mine Specific
4x4 Driver Training
Building complete driver competence — from vehicle mastery and terrain control to hazard awareness and defensive driving — tailored to your mining environment and backed by science.
What We Build
Complete Driver Competence
A competent mine driver is more than someone who can pass a test. We develop the full spectrum of skills required to operate a 4x4 vehicle safely, confidently, and responsibly in demanding mining conditions.
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Vehicle Mastery
Full understanding and control of the 4x4 platform — transfer case operation (2H/4H/4L), differential lock engagement, gear selection for terrain, tyre pressure management, and understanding the vehicle's capabilities and limitations.
What we cover
When to engage 4WD vs 2WD. Low range vs high range selection. How differential lock affects steering and traction. Reading the terrain to choose the right drivetrain configuration. Understanding approach, departure, and breakover angles specific to your fleet vehicles.
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Terrain Reading & Off-Road Control
The ability to assess ground conditions, select the correct driving line, manage vehicle momentum, and navigate inclines, descents, ruts, loose gravel, mud, and uneven surfaces safely.
What we cover
Surface reading: gravel stability, mud depth assessment, sand vs compacted earth. Line selection through obstacles. Momentum management — how much is enough, when too much becomes dangerous. Hill ascent commitment and descent control using engine braking. Side-slope awareness and rollover prevention.
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Pre-Trip Inspection & Vehicle Care
Thorough walk-around inspections, fluid checks, tyre condition assessment, brake testing, light verification, and reporting procedures aligned to MHSA and Sasol standards.
What we cover
Structured 15-point pre-use checklist. Identifying common defects on 4x4 LDVs. Understanding when a vehicle is unroadworthy and must not be operated. Correct defect reporting procedures. Post-trip checks and handover protocols.
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Hazard Awareness & Decision Making
Constant situational awareness, proactive hazard identification, safe following distances, intersection management, and interaction with heavy mining equipment and pedestrians.
What we cover
The 12-second visual lead principle. Mirror discipline and blind spot management. Right-of-way protocols with haul trucks and heavy equipment. Pedestrian interface zones. Speed management relative to conditions, visibility, and traffic density. When to stop and reassess vs when to proceed.
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Recovery Awareness
Knowing your limits. When a vehicle is stuck, bogged, or facing terrain beyond its capability, the competent driver knows when to stop, assess, and call for assistance rather than forcing through.
What we cover
Recognising the early signs of loss of traction. When to reverse out vs when to commit. Self-recovery basics: rocking technique, tyre deflation. When and how to call for recovery assistance. Communication protocols. Understanding that forcing through is the primary cause of vehicle damage and rollover incidents on mine sites.
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Cognitive Fitness
Reaction speed, spatial judgement, sustained attention, motor coordination, and pattern recognition — the invisible skills that underpin every driving decision. This is where our psychomotor assessment comes in.
What we cover
Our 5-test psychomotor battery measures these invisible competencies scientifically. The results tell us which drivers need more time on reaction drills, which need coordination coaching, and which are ready for advanced scenarios. It's the foundation that makes the practical training targeted and effective.
"Anyone can drive a 4x4 on a tar road. We train drivers who can read the terrain, manage the vehicle, and make the right call — every time, under any conditions."
— Low Range 4x4 Training Philosophy
Our Methodology
Assess First. Then Train.
We don't believe in one-size-fits-all training. Every driver is different. Our methodology starts with a scientific psychomotor assessment to understand each candidate's cognitive and motor profile — then we tailor the training to where it matters most.
1
Psychomotor Assessment
5-test battery per candidate
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2
A / B / C Classification
Trainability profile generated
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3
Group Analysis
Identify focus areas
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4
Tailored Training
Site-specific, targeted delivery
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5
Competency Sign-Off
US 254135 aligned certification
"Knowing where your drivers stand before the training begins means every minute on the course is spent where it actually counts."
— Low Range 4x4 Training Methodology
Assessment powered by
Moto-R Psychometric Testing
Science-Backed Assessment
Psychomotor Test Battery
A validated 43-minute occupational fitness-to-work assessment that evaluates five core psychomotor abilities critical for safe vehicle operation in hazardous mining environments.
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~43 Minutes
Total battery duration per candidate, excluding practice trials and breaks. Efficient enough to assess an entire group in a single session.
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5 Core Tests
Determination, Time Movement Anticipation, Two-Hand Coordination, Signal Detection, and Cognitrone — each targeting a distinct psychomotor ability.
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Mining-Normed
Scores are compared against South African mining industry normative data. Results are contextualised for your specific operational environment.
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Validity Screened
Automatic checks for disengagement, random responding, and anticipation — ensuring every result is genuine and clinically sound.
The Battery
Five Tests. One Complete Profile.
Click any test card to explore the detail. Each test measures a different cognitive-motor ability essential for safe driving in a mine environment.
01
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Determination Test
Choice Reaction • Stress Tolerance • Sustained Attention
Can the driver make rapid, accurate decisions under increasing speed and pressure? This test simulates the multi-stimulus demands of operating in time-critical mining environments.
Click to expand details
How it works: The candidate responds to 9 different stimulus types (5 colours, 2 audio tones, 2 directional cues). The pacing is adaptive — it speeds up on correct responses and slows down on errors, creating natural pressure.
Performance = (Accuracy% x 0.60) + (Speed Score x 0.40)
Sub-analyses: Category performance breakdown, time-block fatigue analysis, Stress Index (performance degradation over time), error pattern analysis distinguishing impulsive responding from processing slowness.
Why it matters for driving: Mining environments demand split-second decisions with multiple simultaneous stimuli — oncoming vehicles, pedestrians, signage, equipment movement. This test directly measures that capacity.
02
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Time Movement Anticipation
Spatial-Temporal Prediction • Motion Anticipation • Timing
Can the driver accurately judge the speed and arrival time of moving objects? Critical for gap estimation, safe following distances, and interactions with moving equipment.
Click to expand details
How it works: A moving object travels along a path and disappears behind an occlusion zone (30-70% hidden). The candidate must press at the exact moment the object would reach the target. Tested across 5 speed levels and 4 trajectory types (linear, parabolic, bounce, curvilinear).
Score = Accuracy(AE) x 0.45 + Precision(VE) x 0.30 + Speed Consistency x 0.15 + Trajectory Adaptation x 0.10
Safety flag: A consistent late bias (CE > +100ms) is associated with increased risk in vehicle gap-estimation tasks. This is flagged for roles involving traffic or moving equipment.
Test reliability: Based on the ZBA paradigm with test-retest reliability of r = 0.92 – 0.98.
03
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Two-Hand Coordination
Bilateral Motor Control • Tri-Limb Synchronisation • Balance
Can the driver independently control multiple limbs simultaneously? Reflects the demands of operating a vehicle with steering, gear selection, and pedal control simultaneously.
Click to expand details
How it works: The candidate controls both hands and a foot simultaneously to track targets across easy, medium, and hard difficulty levels. The test measures dual-hand coordination, tri-limb synchronisation, and hand balance.
Performance = (Dual-Hand x 0.50) + (Tri-Limb x 0.30) + (Balance x 0.20)
Learning effect: The test also tracks improvement from the first third to the last third. Improvement >10% indicates significant motor learning ability — a strong trainability indicator.
04
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Signal Detection
Sustained Attention • Vigilance • Signal-Noise Discrimination
Can the driver maintain focus over extended periods and reliably detect critical signals among routine background stimuli? Mirrors real-world hazard detection demands.
Click to expand details
How it works: Based on Signal Detection Theory (SDT). The candidate must identify target signals among noise stimuli across visual and auditory channels. Only 30% of trials contain a real target — testing the ability to stay alert.
Score = d'Normalised x 0.60 + Vigilance x 0.25 + Bias x 0.15
Vigilance tracking: The test monitors whether attention declines over time. A d' drop exceeding 15% is flagged as a significant vigilance decrement — critical for long shifts on site.
05
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Cognitrone
Pattern Recognition • Visual Discrimination • Decision Speed
Can the driver rapidly identify visual patterns — reading gauges, interpreting warning signs, spotting equipment defects, and making accurate visual judgements under time pressure?
Click to expand details
How it works: The candidate identifies matching patterns from a set of 4-6 comparison items, including rotated and mirrored variants. Difficulty adapts based on performance across simple, medium, and complex patterns.
Performance = (Accuracy x 50) + (Precision x 20) + (Recall x 20) + (Speed x 10)
Strategy analysis: Reveals whether the candidate adopts a conservative strategy (high precision, misses some) or liberal strategy (catches everything, more false positives) — both relevant to driving decision-making style.
Classification
The A / B / C System
Every test produces a performance score (0–100) compared against mining industry norms. The result is a clear, colour-coded classification that tells us exactly where each driver stands.
A
Above Average
≥ 85th Percentile
Strong psychomotor performance. The candidate demonstrates excellent capacity for the skill area. Training can focus on advanced techniques and situational refinement.
B
Average
25th – 84th Percentile
Within normal operational range. Solid foundation present. Training targets specific sub-areas where improvement will have the greatest safety impact.
C
Below Average
< 25th Percentile
May require further assessment or extended training focus. The candidate needs additional support in this area. Training is adapted with more repetition and guided practice.
The combined A/B/C profile across all five tests provides a holistic view of psychomotor fitness. The pattern of results across tests is more informative than any single score in isolation.
— Psychomotor Test Battery Technical Reference
The Bridge
From Assessment to Action
The psychomotor results don't just classify — they directly inform how we structure and deliver the practical training for your team.
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Reaction & Stress Tolerance
Determination Test results shape our emergency braking and hazard avoidance scenarios. Drivers scoring C receive additional time and repetition on reactive exercises.
See training link
A-candidates: Advanced multi-hazard simulations, leadership pairing.
B-candidates: Standard defensive drills with progressive difficulty.
C-candidates: Simplified scenarios with guided coaching, additional repetitions, and confidence-building exercises before progressing.
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Motion Anticipation
Time Movement results directly inform following distance training and intersection behaviour. Late-bias drivers receive focused gap-estimation exercises.
See training link
Drivers with late bias (CE > +100ms) are flagged for additional exercises on approaching intersections, merging with site traffic, and judging equipment movement speeds. Early-bias drivers focus on patience and controlled responses.
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Vehicle Control
Two-Hand Coordination results shape vehicle handling exercises. Balance scores indicate whether a driver will struggle with simultaneous steering, shifting, and braking.
See training link
Low tri-limb scores: More time on basic clutch-brake-steer drills before advancing to terrain. High learning-effect scores: The driver improves fast — we push them further. Poor hand balance: Extra attention to steering control exercises.
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Hazard Awareness
Signal Detection results inform observation and scanning drills. Drivers with vigilance decrement are coached on sustained awareness strategies for long shifts.
See training link
Conservative-bias drivers (miss hazards): Focus on active scanning techniques and mirror discipline. Liberal-bias drivers (over-react to non-hazards): Focus on threat assessment and proportional response. Vigilance decrement: Fatigue management strategies.
The Programme
Training Schedule
A flexible 1 to 2 day programme structured around your team's psychomotor profiles. Day 2 is recommended for groups with significant C-classifications or where extended practical time is required.
Day 1 — Core Training
Day 2 — Extended Practical
07:00 – 07:30
Registration & Induction
Site safety briefing, PPE verification, programme overview, and introduction to the assessment process.
07:30 – 08:30
Psychomotor Test Battery
Each candidate completes the full 5-test psychomotor assessment (~43 minutes). Results are processed immediately to generate individual A/B/C profiles.
- Determination Test (8 min)
- Time Movement Anticipation (6 min)
- Two-Hand Coordination (7 min)
- Signal Detection (10 min)
- Cognitrone (12 min)
08:30 – 09:00
Results Debrief & Group Formation
Individual results discussed confidentially. Training groups formed based on psychomotor profiles to ensure targeted instruction. Each driver understands their strengths and focus areas.
09:00 – 10:30
Theory: Defensive Driving & MHSA Compliance
Interactive classroom session aligned to Unit Standard 254135.
- Mine Health & Safety Act requirements
- Sasol Life Saving Rules alignment
- Hazard identification & risk assessment
- Site traffic management plan review
- Defensive driving principles for mining
10:30 – 10:45
Break
Refreshments and comfort break.
10:45 – 12:30
Practical: Vehicle Pre-Use & Controlled Handling
- Vehicle walk-around inspection & defect reporting
- Controlled low-speed manoeuvring exercises
- Reversing with mirrors and spotters
- Navigating tight turns and narrow roadways
- Pedestrian and equipment awareness zones
13:00 – 15:30
Practical: Defensive & Off-Road Driving
- Emergency braking & hazard avoidance scenarios
- Interaction with heavy vehicles and equipment
- Dust, weather, and reduced visibility protocols
- Gravel/rough surface handling & incline techniques
- Recovery awareness — knowing when to stop
- Safe following distances in mine traffic
15:30 – 16:00
Competency Assessment & Close-Out
Formal competency evaluation. Candidates who demonstrate competency receive certification aligned to US 254135. Candidates requiring further development are identified with a clear remediation plan.
07:00 – 07:30
Day 1 Recap & Focus Areas
Review of Day 1 observations. Specific focus areas identified from psychomotor profiles and Day 1 practical performance. Tailored objectives set for each driver.
07:30 – 10:00
Extended Practical: Targeted Skill Development
- Focused exercises based on individual psychomotor weak areas
- C-classified drivers: Intensive coached sessions on specific deficits
- Advanced 4x4 techniques for rough terrain
- Ascent/descent control on inclines and gravel surfaces
- Obstacle crossing and line selection
- Vehicle momentum management
10:15 – 12:30
Site-Specific Scenario Training
- Full site route driving under observation
- Real-world scenario simulations at actual site locations
- Multi-hazard response exercises
- Night/low-light awareness (if applicable)
- Emergency procedures and communication protocols
13:00 – 14:30
Final Competency Assessment
Comprehensive practical assessment for drivers who required additional development. Formal sign-off and certification. Detailed individual feedback reports provided to management.
14:30 – 15:00
Management Debrief & Reports
Full psychomotor report per candidate delivered. Group analysis and recommendations. Ongoing development plan for identified risk areas.
Regulatory Alignment
Unit Standard 254135
Our training programme is developed in alignment with Unit Standard 254135 — Operate a 4x4 vehicle in a responsible and safe manner — ensuring full regulatory compliance within the mining context.
Specific Outcomes
- ✓Demonstrate understanding of vehicle controls, systems, and capabilities
- ✓Perform pre-trip and post-trip vehicle inspections
- ✓Operate the vehicle safely in various on and off-road conditions
- ✓Apply defensive driving techniques in the operational environment
- ✓Respond appropriately to emergencies and adverse conditions
- ✓Demonstrate knowledge of relevant legislation (MHSA, NRT)
Assessment Criteria
- ✓Written/oral knowledge assessment on road rules and regulations
- ✓Practical demonstration of safe vehicle operation
- ✓Hazard identification and risk assessment competency
- ✓Emergency response and recovery procedures
- ✓Vehicle inspection and defect reporting
- ✓Compliance with site traffic management plan
Our psychomotor assessment adds a layer of rigour above and beyond the unit standard requirements — giving SASOL measurable, scientific data on every driver's cognitive and motor fitness for the role.
Hands-On Training
4x4 Practical Driving Skills
The core of our programme is behind the wheel. Every driver gets extensive seat time, working through progressive exercises designed to build genuine confidence and competence in real mine conditions.
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Vehicle Systems & 4WD Operation
Hands-on demonstration and practice with the 4x4 drivetrain system. Each driver physically engages and disengages the transfer case, understands high range vs low range, and learns when differential lock is appropriate.
Exercises
Transfer case operation: Stationary and rolling engagement of 4H and 4L. Understanding the dashboard indicators.
Diff lock: When to engage, when to disengage, and why you never turn with diff lock on.
Gear selection: Which gear for which terrain. Why 2nd gear low range is your best friend on an incline. Engine braking techniques.
Traction control systems: What your vehicle's electronics can and cannot do for you.
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Incline & Descent Control
Controlled hill ascents and descents on gravel and uneven surfaces. Understanding commitment on an incline, engine braking on a descent, and what to do when things go wrong halfway up.
Exercises
Hill ascent: Approach assessment, gear pre-selection, maintaining momentum without excess speed, and the decision point — commit or reverse back.
Hill descent: Selecting the correct gear before the crest, feet off the brake, letting the engine control the speed. Understanding why riding the brake causes loss of control.
Failed ascent: Controlled reversal down an incline using mirrors and steering technique. Not panicking, not turning sideways.
Side slopes: Understanding the vehicle's centre of gravity and rollover risk. When a slope is too steep to traverse safely.
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Surface & Obstacle Navigation
Reading ground conditions, selecting the correct driving line through ruts and obstacles, managing wheel placement, and understanding how different surfaces affect traction and vehicle behaviour.
Exercises
Gravel roads: Speed management, steering input, and understanding how loose gravel affects braking distance — especially on mine haul roads.
Ruts & washouts: Straddling vs following. Wheel placement and approach angle. When to use momentum and when to crawl.
Mud & soft ground: Reading mud depth, maintaining momentum, straight-line travel, and steering corrections. Recognising when to stop before you're stuck.
Rock & uneven terrain: Tyre placement, suspension travel awareness, protecting the undercarriage, and slow-speed control.
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Low-Speed Vehicle Handling
Precise vehicle control in confined spaces — the most common environment on a mine site. Reversing, tight turns, parking in restricted areas, and operating around pedestrians and equipment.
Exercises
Reversing: Mirror technique, spotter communication and hand signals, reversing in a straight line and around corners. Speed control.
Tight manoeuvring: Three-point turns in narrow roads, navigating workshop areas with obstacles, maintaining awareness of all four corners of the vehicle.
Pedestrian zones: Speed reduction, eye contact with pedestrians, horn protocol, and window-down awareness in congested areas.
Parking: Safe parking orientation (nose-out for emergency departure), wheel chocking on inclines, and shutdown procedures.
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Emergency & Recovery Situations
Controlled emergency braking, evasive steering, tyre blowout response, and self-recovery basics. Building the muscle memory to respond correctly when it matters most.
Exercises
Emergency braking: ABS-equipped and non-ABS braking technique. Threshold braking on gravel. Understanding stopping distances at different speeds on different surfaces.
Evasive steering: The swerve-and-recover manoeuvre. Not overcorrecting. Keeping the vehicle stable after an avoidance move.
Tyre blowout: Accelerate briefly, do not brake, steer straight, coast to a stop. Practised at controlled speed.
Self-recovery: When to attempt, when to call for help. Basic techniques — rocking, reversing out of ruts, tyre pressure reduction in sand/mud.
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Route Driving & Final Assessment
A full observed drive along actual site routes, combining all skills learned. The instructor assesses the driver's ability to apply vehicle control, hazard awareness, defensive techniques, and decision-making as a complete package.
Assessment criteria
Scored on: Pre-departure checks, seatbelt and mirror setup, smooth departure, speed management, intersection behaviour, following distance, hazard commentary, terrain selection, vehicle sympathy, parking procedure, and shutdown.
Outcome: Competent / Not Yet Competent with detailed feedback. Not yet competent candidates receive a development plan and may be scheduled for additional seat time.
"Our drivers don't just learn the theory of 4x4 operation — they feel the vehicle, read the ground, and build real confidence through repetition and coached practice in actual mine conditions."
— Low Range 4x4 Practical Training
Core Competency
Defensive Driving for Mining
Our defensive driving module goes beyond generic road safety. It is tailored specifically for the hazards, traffic patterns, and conditions found within your mining operational environment.
🚗 Hazard Recognition
Systematic scanning techniques for identifying hazards specific to your site — blind spots, pedestrian zones, heavy equipment interfaces, and high-risk intersections.
Detail
Tied to Signal Detection psychomotor results. Drivers with vigilance decrement are given enhanced scanning drills. Conservative-bias drivers focus on active hazard search patterns.
🚧 Space Management
Maintaining safe following distances, buffer zones around heavy machinery, and correct positioning on mine roads. Speed management for conditions.
Detail
Time Movement Anticipation results identify drivers who misjudge closing speeds. These candidates receive additional exercises on gap estimation and safe following distance calculation.
🌪 Environmental Adaptation
Driving in dust, rain, low light, and on varied surface conditions including gravel, mud, and uneven terrain common in mining operations.
Detail
Practical scenarios simulating reduced visibility. Off-road techniques including momentum control, incline/decline management, and surface reading for traction.
⚠ Emergency Response
Emergency braking, evasive manoeuvres, rollover prevention, and knowing when to stop and seek assistance rather than forcing through an obstacle.
Detail
Determination Test results directly inform emergency response drill intensity. Drivers with high stress index scores (>20% fatigue effect) are coached on maintaining performance under pressure.
Your Environment
Site-Specific Customisation
The entire programme is customised to your operational environment. We train on your roads, with your vehicles, under your conditions — ensuring maximum transfer from training to real-world application.
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SASOL Brandspruit
Theory at your DD department premises. Practical training conducted at your designated safe areas within the facility — directly relevant to actual operating conditions.
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Your Vehicles
Training conducted on the actual 4x4 LDVs and vehicles used on site. Pre-use inspections and handling exercises directly relevant to your fleet.
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Your Traffic Plan
Comprehensive review and integration of your site traffic management plan. All training scenarios aligned to your specific routes, intersections, and procedures.
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Your Rules
Full alignment with SASOL Life Saving Rules, MHSA requirements, and site-specific safety protocols. Compliance is built into every element of the programme.
Every exercise is conducted at your site, with your equipment, referencing your actual hazards. This is not classroom theory — this is training that transfers directly to the job from day one.