The terms Preventive maintenance and Predictive maintenance are often used interchangeably but are considerably different. Understanding the difference can help you come up with a better maintenance plan, and save you time and money in the long run.
Preventive Maintenance refers to the scheduled maintenance and servicing of equipment to keep it and in satisfactory operating condition. Preventive strategies include:
Preventive maintenance keeps to a set schedule, either determined by the manufacturer of the equipment or a company’s maintenance staff. Better than a “fix it when it breaks” approach, preventive maintenance helps prevent equipment failure by systematically replacing deteriorating components before they lead to failure.
While a maintenance schedule will help reduce unplanned downtime, it does little to reduce maintenance costs for labor and spare parts. Determining the ideal time to replace components is not an exact science, because it focuses on estimates rather than actual equipment condition, resulting in unnecessary work.
Often, this leads to the replacement of components prematurely and sometimes creates new problems. Studies show that 30 percent of PM is unnecessary, and another 30 percent can be harmful if a human error causes collateral damage, leading to additional downtime.
Predictive Maintenance improves on the idea of preventive maintenance replacing only parts that are about to break down instead of relying on a schedule. It saves time and money by performing maintenance only when it is necessary.
This approach minimizes unplanned downtime and reduces repair costs, including labor and part inventory. Employing a condition monitoring solution that tracks asset/system pressure, temperature, vibration, increased noise, humidity levels, and other conditions is the most effective predictive maintenance strategy because it covers three critical bases:
That last point is especially important. Condition monitoring for predictive maintenance gives operators the power to predict and improve processes, so they can optimize systems and assets based on what’s actually happening rather than simply reacting to unexpected events or "fixing" problems that may not even exist.
Slapping a sensor on every piece of equipment in your plant sounds like a nirvana of predictive maintenance, but applying a predictive maintenance solution to every asset in a facility just isn’t cost-efficient. Consider what’s practical before implementing a predictive maintenance solution. Give preference to assets and systems that are process-critical, expensive, or can cause collateral damage if they were to fail.
If failure of a particular asset or system will do little to no damage to the overall process, you can probably get away with a preventive, or even reactive, maintenance strategy (though we don’t recommend that last one).
A properly balanced predictive/preventive maintenance strategy will:
When used in tandem, Parker’s SensoNODE™ Blue sensors and Voice of the Machine™ mobile software provide an accurate and easy-to-use condition monitoring for predictive maintenance solution that uses Bluetooth technology to transmit data wirelessly.
Designed to work seamlessly together, SensoNODE Blue sensors and Voice of the Machine software allow less staff to quickly monitor more points of importance with increased accuracy, helping them cover more ground in the same amount of time, or even faster. Read more about the SensoNODE solution.
Source: Parker Hannifin Fluid Gas Handling Team