The Effectiveness Equation for IR Thermography Programs
Calculation can identify where specific improvements can be made
to an infrared predictive maintenance program.
By Fred Colbert, Colbert
Infrared Services
Posted 11-08-04
The world was changed when Albert Einstein introduced the
equation E = mc2, not so much for the fact that it led to the
understanding of atomic energy, but that for the first time
it united the physics of energy and matter.
In the same manner, to be able to truly evaluate the effectiveness
of an infrared predictive maintenance program there must be
an understanding of the relationship between the equipment
that is to be inspected and the problems that are found and
repaired. Too often the focus is on only the infrared images
that the camera produces while the solutions that the data
produced from the program can provide get lost.
It all boils down to a simple but fundamental law that is
expressed by the equation E = IR8 which focuses on measuring
the effectiveness of the overall infrared program as well as
on each of the individual components that contribute to its
success. Both components help answer critical questions as
to where specific improvements can be made that will lead to
a world class infrared predictive maintenance inspection program.
I = the effectiveness ratio of the ability to test all of
the equipment/inventory that has been or should be inspected
(for a specific inspection)
I is the ratio of the number of pieces of equipment in inventory
that actually have been tested divided by the total inventory
of what was supposed to be tested (total inventory tested,
plus what was not able to be tested at the time of the inspection
because of various reasons, i.e., not running, not accessible,
under repair at the time of the inspection, etc.).
I = itested /itotal inventory: tested + not tested
Example: Suppose that there are 100 pieces of equipment in
inventory that need to be tested. On the day of the inspection,
only 75 pieces of equipment are available for testing because
the other 25 pieces of equipment are not running. To solve
for I, divide the number of pieces of equipment that were actually
tested by the total number of pieces of equipment that were
to be tested in inventory.
itested = 75
itotal inventory: tested + not tested = 100
I = 75/100 = 0.75 or 75 percent
This represents the effectiveness of being able to test everything
in the facility that should have been tested. A low percentage
indicates a program that is not very effective at actually
testing the equipment that has been selected to be inspected.
A high percentage indicates a program that is very effective
because the majority of the equipment is actually being tested.
A low tested inventory ratio indicates that only a few pieces
of equipment were actually tested. This can be for reasons
that may or may not be influenced by the thermographers’ efforts.
A high ratio indicates that the majority of the equipment was
actually tested, and since the purpose of having an infrared
inspection program is to test equipment, the more equipment
tested that is part of the infrared predictive inspection program,
the better.
R = the effectiveness ratio of the ability to repair the problems
that have been found (covering all inspections)
R is the ratio of the number of successfully repaired problems
(closed, spanning all inspections) divided by the total number
of problems that have been found (all open and closed problems,
spanning all inspections).
R = rtotal problems repaired /rtotal problems found spanning
all inspections
It is important to understand that a problem can span multiple
inspections and still be the same problem (a chronic problem).
It is not uncommon for 15-25 percent of problems that are written
up in an inspection to be chronic problems. A chronic problem
is not a new problem (acute problem written up only once),
but the same problem on a specific piece of equipment that
spans multiple inspections (chronic problems). This is an important
point when considering what the true number of problems is
at a specific facility.
If a method of tracking chronic problems vs acute problems
is not established in a program, then total problem counts
will be greatly distorted, greatly increasing the number of
problems and falsely showing more problems than actually exist.
Take a look at the total effectiveness of repairs. Suppose
that 10 problems were found during equipment inspection. Of
the 10 problems that have been found, how many of them have
been actually repaired correctly (rescanned, reconciled, and
found to be correctly repaired)?
Example: Assume that five of the 10 problems have been repaired
correctly and verified with infrared. From this the effectiveness
ratio of the repairs can be established compared to the total
number of problems that have been found during the life of
the infrared program.
rtotal problems repaired to date = 5
rtotal problems found to date = 10
R = 5/10 = 0.50 or 50 percent
This represents the closed effectiveness ratio of being able
to repair all problems that have been found.
A low closed repair ratio indicates that only a few problems
have been actually repaired correctly. The reasons for this
may go beyond the responsibility of the repair personnel’s
efforts to effectively fix the problems such as not being able
to take the piece of equipment out of service to repair it
correctly. A high ratio indicates that the majority of problems
have actually been repaired correctly.
8 the number of inspections that have been done over time
8 represents the goal that there will be many inspections
running on to infinity (understanding that that will not likely
happen but it represents the life of the infrared program in
perpetuity).
E = total effectiveness of the infrared program
From this, the individual components that comprise the success
of an infrared predictive program can be used to evaluate its
success.
E = IR8
where:
I = 0.75
R = 0.5
0.75 x 0.5 = 0.375 or 37.5 percent program effectiveness
If 100 percent of the equipment had been tested that was selected
to be tested (100/100 = 1) then the effectiveness ratio would
equal 1 x 0.5 = 0.50 or 50 percent.
If everything was tested (100/100 = 1) and fixed (10/10 =
1), then the effectiveness ratio would be 1 x 1 = 1 or 100
percent successful.
Although a 100 percent success rating is unlikely for any
infrared program, it is the trends that these numbers reflect
that show the real picture of what is going on within a program,
or from one program/site/facility to another. Careful monitoring
of these ratios will provide a clear perspective as to the
health of a facility’s infrared predictive maintenance
program and the total effect it has on the bottom line.
Indicators to watch
If the I ratio is usually high and then starts to drop, this
could be an indicator of poor scheduling of equipment to be
tested when in reality it is not running or thermographers
are not completing their inspection routes.
If the R ratio is low, then most likely there is no ability
to take the equipment out of service to fix it, there is a
poor quality of workmanship on the repairs that are being made,
or a poor quality of replacement parts are being used.
Effective programs
The benefits of a successful infrared predictive maintenance
inspection program are tremendous. Some forethought and a solid
foundation in managing the data of what is to be tested, what
was not, what problems were found, and whether they were fixed,
will provide the expected return on investment over time.
Using a mobile database for developing the infrastructure
to handle the data for tracking what is and is not tested,
as well as reconciling open chronic and acute problems over
time, is the key for the effective use of the E = IR8 formula.
The database can easily be queried to provide the necessary
reports to evaluate the effectiveness of each of the contributing
components as well as the overall program. Keeping it simple
and remembering that it all boils down to the formula will
be the guide to a world class infrared predictive maintenance
program.
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