Abstract
Over recent years, the importance of maintenance, and
therefore maintenance management within manufacturing
organizations has grown. This is a result of increasing
pressure upon manufacturing organizations to meet
customer and corporate demands, and equipment
availability and performance is central to achieving
these. Condition Based Maintenance (CBM) is widely
accepted and used as a financially effective maintenance
strategy. The economic benefit of CBM is achieved if the
tools and techniques associated with CBM are applied to
the right equipment. In particular the degradation
behavior of the equipment needs to be understood.
Understanding of degradation is strongly related with
failure models However, very little is known or published
about the importance and the role of various failure
models. Thus, if failure models are not analyses and
understood the use of CBM could be directed to the wrong
equipment and therefore achieve incorrect and expensive
results. The paper examines the relationship between the
failure patterns observed in industrial maintenance
practice and the corresponding impact on adoption and
potential benefits of Condition-Based Maintenance (CBM).
The paper will explain the need for accurate and up to
date equipment information to support the correct
maintenance approach. The paper suggests the importance
of further supporting such investments by appropriately
addressing the need to collect relevant data as a basis
upon which to make the right decisions.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 87-91 |
Journal | Procedia CIRP |
Volume | 22 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 2014 |
MoE publication type | A1 Journal article-refereed |
Event | 3rd International Through-life Engineering Services Conference, TESConf 2014 - Cranfield, United Kingdom Duration: 4 Nov 2014 → 5 Nov 2014 |
Keywords
- condition based maintenance
- maintenance efficiency