Test Frequency
www.DLIengineering.com
Posted 13-6-05
Testing machines too often costs money and wastes resources.
Testing machines too infrequently can result in missed faults
and catastrophic failures. The key is to find the middle ground
and this will depend on the machine, its history and its criticality.
Some high speed machines can devolve from perfect health to
failure in a matter of minutes. These will require continuous
monitoring protection systems. Other machines may run for
years without problems. These should be tested quarterly or
biannually with test frequency increasing as incipient faults
begin to appear. Although a small pump may be inexpensive
to repair or replace, if its failure causes a million dollars
of product to be ruined, it can be said to be quite critical
and worthy of more frequent testing.
The best approach is to spend some time researching the
machines, their history and their use. Understanding how the
machines fail often gives some indication of how long it will
take them to fail after faults begin to appear. A good deal
of resources can be saved and better appropriated if records
are kept over time and the schedule adjusted as more machinery
history and knowledge becomes available.
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