CP 2 Vibration Monitoring and Analysis Guide
CP 2 Vibration Monitoring and Analysis Guide
By Linda K. Fischer
Associate Editora
Selecting technology
Terrence OHanlon of VibrationSchool.com suggests the following questions be
addressed when a company is in the selection process for new technology:
How do the vibration analysis and other PdM technologies fit into the overall
maintenance and reliability program? Is there a systematic process for
determining the most critical equipment to monitor?
Can the data be interfaced with the primary information system (CMMS or
other) to generate work orders?
How much training is required to become proficient?
How much is the total cost of ownership (TCO) for the life of the vibration
analyzer? Companies may charge a significant sum of money for software
maintenance year after year.
Approaching management
To purchase new vibration monitoring technology, maintenance managers have
to present a business case for the equipment to upper management. Suppliers
in this update offered helpful advice for strengthening managers appeals.
A financial analysis or ROI study is imperative, noted OROS and the Vibration
Institute. Nelson Watson of Watson Engineering, Inc. added, Take the time and
effort to perform an economic justification for the new investments. The
investment must be cost effective and meet company return on investment
requirements.
Further advice came from William E. Johnson of Engineering Concepts, LLC.
He urged managers to identify all costs associated with all maintenance
functions, especially repeat repairs and/or breakdowns. How many items do you
have to maintain in inventory to replace broken or failed equipment? Does
mechanical electrical failure affect production rates or increased scrap rates? If
it does, then determine the cost and how that affects your product cost margins.
This is a lot of paper work, but it is extremely necessary to justify the added
expense of new equipment or consulting services. You will be surprised how
repeat failures and even frequent repairs will affect the bottom line.
The PdM manager should be able to demonstrate an increase in
uptime/availability due to his vibration monitoring program, noted Martin T.
Morrissey of Monarch Instrument. He must be able to show an improvement to
the bottom line by being able to keep equipment running longer, safer, and
without unscheduled downtime, added Lou Morando of SPM Instrument Inc.
All benefits must be presented in dollar terms. What can you learn or achieve
with the new technology that you could not achieve before, and how can that
help increase production, decrease downtime, or generally save money for the
organization, summarized Jason Tranter of Mobius North America.
Besides documenting current efforts well, Mary Ann Ford of SKF Reliability
Systems noted managers should relate results to key performance indicators,
such as mean time between failure (MTBF) numbers, cost savings, unexpected
failures over time, etc.
Advancements in technology
The case to management may be made easier due to advancements in the
technology in recent years. Because of the simplicity of the new technology,
useful and effective data can now be collected by lesser skilled personnel for
reliability specialists to analyze. In addition, the new technology is more
affordable and easier to useproviding for a faster ROI, said Steve Reilly of
Design Maintenance Systems Inc.
Products on todays market offer much more flexibility and power than those
from the past. Vibration analyzers are now available offering over 100,000 lines
of resolution allowing better detection of machinery faults. These tools have
built-in features to help the user decipher different machinery problems, within
the field machinery fault frequencies, bearing frequencies, and alarm levels.
Software programs are now more user friendly and assist in the analysis of
data, offered Greg Lee of Ludeca Inc.
A simple piece of advice came from David Poffenbarger of Fastrack
Technologies: Start a small program that can be run efficiently. As successes
come, expand as necessary. And there is another benefit of a vibration
monitoring program: An important, but often undiscussed, benefit of regular
condition monitoring is that it forces personnel to look at operating equipment.
Many incipient problems are identified simply by having somebody stand and
wait for a data collector to perform its job, noted Doug Smithman of EMP
Engineering Services, Inc.
As Skip Morrison of Prognost Systems, Inc. summarized, Investments in
(proper) on-line monitoring technology have proven that a clear reduction in the
cost of operating and maintaining the overall process facility can be achieved in
the short term. On-line monitoring will improve plant safety by mitigating the risk
of catastrophic machine damage, improve production throughput by reducing
unscheduled outages via early failure warning alerts, and allow a modern
condition-based maintenance approach.
Financial impact
It is vital for those responsible for the vibration monitoring and analysis program
to establish a financial process that adequately shows senior management the
impact the vibration program is having on the companys profits.
to $10,000 per day for untreated sewage being discharged into the nearby river.
(Machine Dynamics Inc.)
To assist you in the development of a vibration monitoring and analysis program
and in the selection of specialized equipment and skills, we present this guide to
information on vibration hardware, software, and services.. The information was
supplied directly by the companies listed .
http://www.mtonline.com/article/0605vibguide