Constructing An Effective Maintenance Plan
Constructing An Effective Maintenance Plan
Constructing An Effective Maintenance Plan
Plan
Dave Porrill
A common mistake however, is to jump straight from the work order feedback and
immediately change the words on the checklists. When this happens, the integrity of the
preventive maintenance programme is immediately compromised because the revised
words on the checklist have no defendable scientific basis. This should be avoided
wherever possible.
The far better approach to avoid this guessing game is to route all the checklist
amendments through the same analysis as was used originally to create the initial
checklists. This means that the integrity of the maintenance program is sustained over
the long term. Implicit in this approach, however, is the need to have a robust system in
which the content of the analysis can be captured and updated easily.
Finally, all the information that gets captured into the CMMS must be put to good use
otherwise it is a waste of time. This is the value of management reports that can be
created from maintenance information.
Craft
Frequency
Safety / Non-safety tasks
Running / Non-running checks and sensible
Timing, etc. …
The sum of the workload hours for each month draws the workload line. The sum of the
manpower hours draws the labor capacity line. Where the workload exceeds the labor
capacity, the load must be smoothed, or additional resources may be required.
The preventive maintenance hours from the CMMS are obtained from the totals from the
long-range maintenance plan described in the previous section. The allowances for
breakdowns, corrective work, etc., are calculated as a rolling 12-month average of the
demonstrated actual data from the CMMS. Data for other allowances may be sourced
from elsewhere if not contained in the CMMS.
Manpower is basically the effective number of man-hours available for each craft in the
crew.
Some example graphs are shown in Figure 4 below.
The Results
The purpose of maintenance measures should be to monitor the health of the
maintenance organisation. Where everything is in control, the metrics will reflect the
success that has been achieved. Conversely, they should also be used to highlight
problem areas and irregularities in order to drive the desired behaviours or areas for
improvement.
The graphs in Figure 7 below illustrate some of the benefits that have been realized on
the author’s site as a result of having a well-functioning maintenance organisation.
These graphs form just part of the regular reporting metrics by which the maintenance
activities are managed.
The first graph shows the conformance to the weekly planned maintenance schedule.
The target is set at 95 percent and is consistently being exceeding across all of the
engineering teams.
Graphs 2 and 3 show how the number of failures has been decreasing month-on-month
in one particular work center over the past 12 months, and correspondingly, the mean
time between failures has been increasing over the same period.
The last 2 graphs show machine availability in two of the key work centers where a full
re-analysis of all the maintenance requirements was recently conducted using an
adapted RCM2 approach. It is clear to see how, in both cases, the equipment availability
was far out of control and from the time the improvement activity was started, the
availability stabilized and is now still tracking consistently above 90 percent. This has
been the result of a few things: one is improving the quality of the preventive
maintenance routines, and another is good maintenance planning
Figure 7 – Sample graphs showing the benefits of an effective maintenance
program