Preventive Maintenance - The Cost of Maintaining Equipment

Marshall Institute's Blog

Current Articles | RSS Feed RSS Feed

Preventive Maintenance - The Cost of Maintaining Equipment

  
  
  
  

The cost of maintaining equipment can be much higher than we realize. Sustaining equipment for its original design consumes time, labor, materials, tools, facilities, and most importantly lost production. Higher costs occur when a greater loss of production is incurred and it takes more time, resources and materials to correct the problem than it did to prevent it.  Reducing equipment downtime and related cost is the greatest argument for planned maintenance versus unplanned maintenance.

Most people know planning ahead is the best approach to preventing corrective maintenance. Preventive maintenance reduces reactive or breakdown maintenance, resulting in lower cost.  In essence, you actually will repair things less often if you do a good job at being proactive and heading off those expensive disasters.  You pay penalties when you respond to problems rather than preventing those problems.  Are you with me?

Many organizations consciously decide to Run To Failure (RTF).  RTF is when we choose to wait until something breaks down before servicing it. RTF can be an acceptable strategy in specific cases but almost always costs more than preventing failure.  An organization that manages by using RTF uses the old saying "If it ain't broke, don't fix it."  Unfortunately, that is the wrong approach.  "An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure" is a better maxim.  Sorry, I couldn't resist a good cliché.  If you wait until the equipment breaks down, you pay for lost production, higher parts cost (often having to be shipped in at a premium cost), overtime, and all associated "collateral damage."

Collateral damage varies by product, equipment, production line, industry etc. To determine the PM program for specific equipment, criticality and the consequence of failure must be established. If the criticality and consequence of failure is high then failure is unacceptable and must be prevented. Think about airplane maintenance. If a critical component on an airplane fails at 30,000ft the consequence of failure if extremely high and the collateral damage is unacceptable, so scheduled maintenance must be performed.

A more common and less critical example of collateral damage is that a $10 seal may wind up costing thousands of dollars in lost production, parts and labor; not to mention lost confidence from the customer for late deliveries as well. The normal rule of thumb is that corrective maintenance costs two to five times more than preventive maintenance. Yes, there is a cost associated with preventive maintenance, but how much more are you spending on corrective maintenance? Look at the big picture not just maintenance dollars

 


Tracy Strawn
VP of International Business

Comments

I am Mechanical maintenance training Officer, 
 
Iwould like to attend some of the Trainings. 
 
 
 
 
 
Meshack M. Mantoga. 
 
Posted @ Monday, April 11, 2011 9:29 PM by Meshack M. Ma`Ntoga
@Meshack - If you are interested in attending one of our trainings you can view our Training Calendar or check out the listings on our website at http://www.marshallinstitute.com/training
 
Thanks!
Posted @ Thursday, April 14, 2011 1:41 PM by Marshall Institute
Is there an industry standard that recommends a certain percent of spending yearly, compared to the total value of a site,that a company should be spending to maintain infrastructure and process integrity.
Posted @ Friday, January 20, 2012 7:20 AM by Rick
Post Comment
Name
 *
Email
 *
Website (optional)
Comment
 *

Allowed tags: <a> link, <b> bold, <i> italics

Subscribe by Email

Your email:

About Marshall Institute

Marshall Institute is an asset management consulting and training company dedicated to helping companies improve the maintenance contribution to their organizational performance. For over 35 years, Marshall Institute has provided world-class consulting and training services, led by experienced, knowledgeable consultants and training professionals producing tangible, measurable results for our clients.



Social Media

     






Browse by Tag