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You are here: Home / Articles / So, What’s Still Wrong with Maintenance

by Mike Sondalini Leave a Comment

So, What’s Still Wrong with Maintenance

So, What’s Still Wrong with Maintenance

Enterprise Asset Management and Maintenance will Always be Spectacularly Unsuccessful at Delivering Failure-Free Equipment, Until you Change to an Equipment Wellness Paradigm

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The role of Maintenance is to eliminate operating equipment risks. Yet, organizations using Preventive and Predictive Maintenance strategies still have equipment breakdowns. They still have forced outages and stoppages. They consistently get emergency repairs. So, what makes today’s Maintenance paradigm so unsuccessful at equipment risk elimination? Because it is the wrong paradigm to use. The right mindset to have is an equipment wellness paradigm!

WHY MAINTENANCE CAN NEVER STOP PLANT AND EQUIPMENT FAILURES

Every part in every machine has a degradation curve. The left-side sketch in the image below shows the degradation curve concept. The right-side sketch represents the degradation curve of selected parts from a pump set like the one pictured. The length and slope of the degradation curve depends on a component’s engineering design and how it’s cared for during its lifetime.

When parts are new they provide their best service. As a part degrades its performance drops. Curves are monitored and tracked using appropriate condition monitoring methods. The ‘P’ (Potential Failure) point is the earliest that we can detect changed performance. This allows the remaining service life to be predicted so the part can be replaced or refurbished as planned maintenance before it’s unusable at the ‘F’ (Functional Failure) point.

Why breakdowns, forced stoppages, and emergency work happens to equipment, despite using the best preventive and predictive maintenance strategies is shown in the next image—their parts’ degradation curves get dramatically cut-short.

A part’s degradation curve shortens and falls as its material-of-construction is damaged by stress.

Those unintended equipment failure events—breakdowns, emergency repairs, forced stoppages—result from excessive stresses in microstructures curtailing the part’s degradation curve.

An equipment wellness paradigm delivers world class reliable plant and machines because it ensures utmost healthy parts and components.  All parts can fail, but not all parts will fail—it depends on the size of the microstructure stresses. A part’s chance of failure changes with its stresses—less stress slows the degradation rate, and the part lives for longer; higher stress lifts the degradation rate, and its life shortens.

Keeping parts microstructure at least stress to minimize the chance of failure initiation is not the focus of a preventive and predictive maintenance paradigm. In a preventive and predictive maintenance paradigm, you let parts go to the ‘P’ point, and then to the ‘F’ point. You wait for ill-health. You do repairs. You get breakdowns, forced stoppages and emergency work.

Equipment failure involves a multitude of uncertainties. High-stress situations CAN occur at several points in a part’s life cycle (formation, manufacture, assembly, installation, operation, maintenance). During its lifetime, a part CAN incur high stresses—the worst ones MAY cause microstructure damage. Once started, the damage CAN become breakdowns, stoppages, and emergency repairs, IF, the requisite cause-and-effect events occur.

The involvement of uncertainty makes failure probabilistic. The laws of probability means high stress events will always arise and then degradation curves will get cut-short. When stress changes at random the date of failure also changes at random.

Because random failure events are unpredictable, it’s impossible for maintenance based on a failure prevention and prediction paradigm to eliminate breakdowns, stoppages, and emergency jobs—chance dictates that from time to time huge stress events happen, regardless of what maintenance strategies you use. Maintenance can never make your equipment failure-free.

NEW ALTERNATIVE TO A MAINTENANCE PARADIGM: A COMPONENT HEALTH AND EQUIPMENT WELLNESS PARADIGM

First parts fail, then equipment stops—if the parts don’t fail, the equipment won’t stop. When an equipment failure happens is a matter of chance. But the stresses that damaged the microstructure of the failed component were not caused by chance.

There is an alternative to a preventive and predictive maintenance paradigm—a component health and equipment wellness paradigm. The focus of component wellness is the lifetime wellbeing of the part’s microstructure. Throughout the life cycle, you proactively create and sustain the conditions that make equipment parts reliable, and you eliminate the possibility of microstructure damaging stress events.

Get control of component reliability, and you get control of equipment reliability. You control parts reliability by controlling material-of-construction degradation. Utmost equipment reliability is achieved when stresses in components do least damage to each parts microstructure. In a Plant Wellness Way EAM System-of-Reliability you live the component health and equipment wellness paradigm. Microstructure stress prevention is the vital outcome you seek in a PWW EAM System-of-Reliability.

When you adopt an equipment wellness paradigm, you use Maintenance to keep parts at their least stress condition, and you use operational process control to minimize lifetime degradation.

For example, the equipment wellness paradigm choice for machinery is to use Precision Maintenance, because its standards and methods always guarantee reduced stress in parts.

In situations where in-service corrosion destroys a part, the equipment wellness paradigm choice is to proactively prevent the corrosion. If you wait for the corrosion to appear and then repair it you will ensure higher operating costs. If corrosion cannot be eliminated, then you provide sacrificial deterioration. As the deterioration approaches its limit the item is replaced or refurbished on planned maintenance.

In the case where dust accumulation on electronic parts cause a short circuit, the equipment wellness paradigm choice is to prevent all dust ingress. You don’t wait to see if dust collects and then fix a short as a breakdown.

For machines that start under high load, the wellness choice is to change the method to least stress start-up. To keep starting at high loads guarantees overload stresses and an emergency job in future.

A NEW FUTURE—CHANGE TO A COMPONENT HEALTH AND EQUIPMENT WELLNESS PARADIGM

It’s the parts that get their degradation curves unexpectedly cut-short that cause emergency repairs, forced shutdowns, and breakdowns.

Maintenance cannot deliver failure-free plant and equipment because it cannot prevent all parts life cycle failure initiation events.

To get maximum lifetime equipment reliability you need to create maximum component lifetime reliability.

You do that by extending the component degradation curve with life cycle strategies and practices that de-stress parts microstructures.

Give your parts’ microstructure a lifetime of health and wellness, and you’ll get the greatest equipment reliability for your operation.

Filed Under: Articles, Life Cycle Asset Management, on Maintenance Reliability

About Mike Sondalini

In engineering and maintenance since 1974, Mike’s career extends across original equipment manufacturing, beverage processing and packaging, steel fabrication, chemical processing and manufacturing, quality management, project management, enterprise asset management, plant and equipment maintenance, and maintenance training. His specialty is helping companies build highly effective operational risk management processes, develop enterprise asset management systems for ultra-high reliable assets, and instil the precision maintenance skills needed for world class equipment reliability.

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