PROACTIVE MECHANIICAL MAINTENANCE BY INTRODUCING OIL CONDITION MONITORING:
By OEM Update Editorial August 7, 2021 2:26 pm IST
Mechanical maintenance personnel are fully aware about the importance of Lubricants and Lubrication of machines, and the role of lubrication in mechanical maintenance in Industrial Plants.
It goes beyond any doubt that oil in machine is like “blood in a human body”. Hence every care has to be taken that only clean lubricants (oils or greases) are fed to the machines. It has been the experience of Oil Company Technical Services executives and several maintenance personnel at plants that oils and greases get contaminated during storage, handling and dispensing – before oils or greases are fed to machines.
This is due to the exposure of oils barrels to “breathing action”. During day, due to sun heat directly falling on barrels they expands the oil content in the barrel and pushed the air over the oil head to outside environment due to the oil cubical expansion, and during night the same oil get contracted due to colder and moist environment leading to suction of air along with moisture in air and environment micro dust. when barrels are kept out-door over a month, this breathing action of barrels will contaminate the oils in the barrels. This “fresh contaminated oil” when fed to machines, leads to mechanical damage in machines.
Hence, the first step to start the process of Proactive Mechanical Maintenance starts from good storage, handling and dispensing of lubricants. It is suggested that the oil and grease barrels are either stored indoor under good housekeeping or under shed covered storage (if indoor storage is not possible) where sun light does not directly fall on barrels.
Under outdoor storage the direct heat of sun falls on oil or grease barrels. Grease barrels when stored outside for a period of 30 days or more, there shall be oil-soap separation leading to grease become off-specification and unfit for use.
Hence, the first step to good “lubrication practices” is to ensure feeding clean oil and good quality grease to machines. Rest assure the mechanical maintenance cost will reduce considerably – This is the basic step for proactive mechanical maintenance.
Therefore, in order to establish proactive maintenance, it is necessary to ensure the following.
These are the important and simple steps required to achieve Proactive Mechanical Maintenance ?
- Keeping all lubricants, specially greases indoor under good housekeeping – as when lubricants (including greases) – do get contaminated or off-spec if stored out-door for over 30 days at the site storage.
- Testing oils and greases regularly. Oil test report available within 48/56 hours, otherwise mechanical damages will set-in, in the machines – hence it is important to have oil testing facilities at site or near the site (in order to get oil test report within 48-56 hours of the oil sample taken.
RECOMMENDED OIL SAMPLING INTERVALS
- Oil testing laboratory at site or near the site is the very basic need to introduce “Proactive maintenance”. Oil test reports must be available to maintenance team within 48 hrs failing mechanical wear/damage starts setting-up in the machine.
- Regular (monthly) plant audit of lubrication practices is useful in improving the maintenance and reducing the mechanical maintenance costs. This cost in many plant is not monitored and hence remains unnoticed. Once a system to monitor the mechanical maintenance costs is introduced, it could be on eye-opener.
- The main emphasis should be on clean oil or greases being fed to machines and lubrication schedules being met on daily-weekly or monthly basis. Has oil testing schedules machine-wise have been made and target being met on month to month basis.
The proactive maintenance leads to increase in life of costly machines, which are high value fixed assets.
Quantifying the Benefits of Oil Analysis:The application of oil analysis reports will lead to improved maintenance activities, and produces benefits to the organisation. Often, oil analysis think only in terms of the savings associated with extended or condition-based oil changes. They often fail to capture value contributions related to equipment reliability visible through wear metal analysis. Effective management of lubrication and oil analysis builds reliability into the system. Oil analysis produces tremendous value when it provides advance warning of machine failures.
The early warning system allows plant management to schedule the maintenance activity to avoid sudden interruption of production, and to have required machine parts and labor lined up.
Below is a summary of some of the costs that can be controlled when decisions are made with the oil analysis reports.
- Downtime Costs – Maintenance team can calculate the typical downtime cost associated with machine’s failure and multiply it by the average duration of the lost production time, it is important to look into only at the profit of the production in the financial analysis.
- Costs of Lubrication – Oil analysis reduce the consumption of lubricants. Change oil if needed, and not on number of hours use in machine. Savings estimates should include lubricant costs, labor and disposal costs.
- Energy Consumption Costs – Usually, improving lubrication and feeding clean lubricants are involved in reducing friction. By comparing energy consumption during normal operation before and after the changes with an amp meter, these savings can be effectively estimated. The clean oil or grease shall reduce friction between two moving surfaces and reduce energy.
- Product Quality Costs – This is especially true in applications like mining machines (having sensitive hydraulic systems), molding, machining, rolling and casting where the precision of hydraulic control is affected by the lubricant’s quality. But it is true elsewhere too.
- Increased Production – Well lubricated machines can produce more. For example, contamination (Dust, dirt, wear metals, moisture / water) or varnish can slow the cycle time of a machine, reducing its output. Likewise, proactive and predictive lubrication analysis and management may enable management to turn production up with greater confidence that reliability will be assured.
MINIMUM DOWN TIME LEADS TO MAXIMUM REVENUE
Authored by:
K.B Mathur, Founder Director,
Global Technical Services.
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