Heat, noise, and vibration. These are the hallmarks of productive engineering and manufacturing environments. They can also be part of an early-warning system that highlights impending problems
Tracking and analysing data is an invaluable part of a condition-monitoring process. If a maintenance operator understands a machine’s normal operating parameters, they can identify any anomalies. This is important, because if equipment starts to generate excessive noise or overheats, it’s almost certainly a sign something needs urgent attention.
What happens next, though, is not necessarily cut and dried.
Critical thinking
If a problem has been detected, a choice has to be made – take the machine offline as soon as possible for repair or wait and see what happens. If the machine or part is not involved in critical operations, there will be less of an imperative to get it fixed early. But ensuring it doesn’t fail at the worst possible time becomes more crucial if it is business critical.
Dr Moray Kidd is a respected academic in the field of maintenance engineering. He believes leaving a problem alone can sometimes be an acceptable course of action. But, he says, too many businesses default to that option without knowing whether it’s the right thing to do.
“A lot of companies will tell you they do condition monitoring,” he says. “But when you scratch the surface and ask what interventions they subsequently make, they’ll often say they haven’t got the resources to undertake any interventions.”
That becomes a problem if a critical resource is at risk of failing.
“There are many examples of small components within a larger system failing for one reason or another. In terms of their monetary value, these are low-cost items, but they can trigger multimillion-pound outages,” Dr Kidd says.
The only way of predicting the consequences of letting a part run-to-fail is to have assessed how important it is to the overall operation. “A criticality assessment identifies the high-risk components within a system,” Dr Kidd explains. “That’s when you can really make the biggest difference.”
These kinds of evaluations have traditionally been the preserve of industries where safety is a high priority – oil and gas, nuclear and aerospace, for example. Understanding which elements of an operation simply cannot fail helps safeguard lives and protect the environment. But it can also make good business sense and is now being used in sectors like food and pharmaceuticals, according to Dr Kidd.