Maintenance Best Practices are critical for every successful individual and company. Maintenance is a unique business process. To be successfully managed, it requires an approach different from other business processes. The program provides a framework for managing maintenance with options that allow decision makers to select the most successful ways to manage maintenance.
Participants attending the program will:
- Identify maintenance best practice key elements for taking action on them, starting with foundations and building up to best practice that will deliver maximum business benefits
- Evaluate practices compared to those of others
- Improve the use of information and communication tools
- Improve productivity through use of better, more timely information
- Understand how world-class organizations solve common maintenance problems
- Improve consistency and reliability of asset information
- Formulate preventive and predictive maintenance strategies
- Optimize planning and scheduling resources
- Develop a proactive maintenance regime within the organization
- Carry out failure analyses thereby avoiding repetitive failures.
- Allow tighter control of maintenance budgets by the avoidance of unplanned equipment failures in service
An Overview of Maintenance Practice and Benchmarking
Introduction to Maintenance (Asset) Management
- Definitions of key terms
- Types of Maintenance - Reactive, and Proactive
- Maintenance in the Business Process
- Evolution in Maintenance Management
- The Principle of Prioritization
The Concept of Best and Worst Practice
- Why Systems Fail?
- Cases of Failures From Different Industries
- Failure Analysis and Technical Causes of Failures
- Generic Lessons Learned and Improvements
Performance Measures and Improvement
Performance Measure and Benchmarking
- Challenges of Performance Measures
- Performance Measures as a Continuous Improvement Process
- Desirable Features in Maintenance Performance Measures
- Best and Worst Practices in Performance Measures
The Overall Equipment Effectiveness as a Source of Best Practice in Maintenance
- Advantages of OEE as an Improvement Program
- Lean Maintenance through the Use of OEE
- Analysis of the Six-Big Losses
- Case Studies for OEE
Total Productive Maintenance
- TPM Principles
- Old versus New Attitudes
- Key TPM Strategies
- Implementation Plan
- Cases of TPM in Industry
- The Visual Control
- The Concept of Ask Why 5 Times
- Results of Successful TPM Implementations
- Difficulties with TPM
Benchmarking Machines Performance and Failure Analysis
Failure Analysis and Modeling
- Maintenance Work Prioritization
- Failure Modes and Effect Analysis
- Fault Tree analysis
- Risk Priority Number
- The Criticality Matrix
- Equipment Criticality Grading
- Cases from Oil and Gas Industry and others
Modeling Reliability of Systems
- Series and Parallel Systems
- The Redundancy Concept
- Types of Redundancy
- When to Use Redundancy
Benchmarking through Reliability Centered Maintenance
- RCM Background and Fundamental Principles
- Steps for RCM Implementation
- Critical Success Factors for RCM
Condition Based Maintenance
The Condition Based Approach
- What to Monitor and Where
- Condition Monitoring Systems
- Remaining Life Prediction
Vibration Monitoring
How and where to Measure Vibration
Diagnosing Faults Using Vibration
General Purpose CM – Non Destructive Testing - NDT
- Thermal Monitoring & Imaging
- Lubricant Monitoring & Wear Debris Analysis
- Ultrasonic UT
Best Practice Through Manufacturing and Maintenance Systems
MRP and ERP Systems
- What is ERP and how did it develop
- What is MRP System
- What is MRPII System
- Planning and Control
- The Bill of Materials
- Master Production Schedule.
- Scope of Decisions
Decision Analysis for Optimization of Maintenance Activities
- How to get the most of your CMMS?
- Benefits that can result from CMMS
- Optimum Decisions for Maintenance Policies
- Unmet needs in Responsive Maintenance
- Key Features of Next Generation Maintenance Systems
- How to transform Data to Decisions
- Examples of Approaches and Case Studies
Delegates should represent a wide range of personnel in the organization who are involved in, or dependent on, effective maintenance management.These should include:
- Maintenance and Reliability Managers
- Maintenance and Reliability Supervisors
- Personnel designated as planners, or identified to become planners
- Team leaders from each Maintenance craft
- Key Operations Supervisors
- Materials Management Managers/Supervisors
- CMMS Administrator or key users
- Key Maintenance support assistants
- Other stakeholders in the Work Planning Function