How To Handle Emergency Maintenance
While preventive maintenance tries to reduce the number of unplanned breakdowns, failures will happen. Some of these include emergency issues. This week, we’ll explore various aspects of how to handle emergency maintenance.
What constitutes an emergency?
What constitutes an emergency? You might discover that the cause behind a piece of equipment is not necessarily a major issue. Maybe your strategy constitutes a run-to-fail mindset. In this case, the expectation of eventual failure exists.
Also, you can't completely blame the reactive mindset. This practice has no plan for stabilizing the reliability of assets. Yes, the repairs and replacement parts might prove costly. However, leaving a machine until it does have a problem does not automatically mean an emergency.
What should you consider in determining whether you require emergency maintenance? Answer: The timing and urgency of repairs. Also known as breakdown maintenance, you face a crucial problem of facility management.
For example, an asset or piece of equipment suddenly experiences an unexpected breakdown. If not a breakdown, it undergoes a significant change in condition. This poses an immediate threat to health and safety. It requires immediate attention.
Types of Emergency Maintenance
How To Prevent Emergency Maintenance
As mentioned above, preventive maintenance plays a part. This means that every employee plays a part. You will create strategies to conduct PMs effectively, condition-based maintenance, and predictive maintenance.
In addition, take note of the reason for failures. If the asset doesn’t have failure codes, establish a set to track and review.
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Take steps to train personnel when the fault lies with "direct human error."
For instance, you won’t blame the designer for the faulty replacement part (you can deal with that issue later). The responsibility lies with the operator who tried to force the equipment to perform above or beyond capacity.
Furthermore, maintenance workers need to understand the distinction between urgent and emergency maintenance. You'll make decisions based on the availability of a backup option for a failed asset. If an alternative is available, you can schedule the maintenance as urgent. If the asset's failure threatens worker safety or is critical to production, emergency maintenance is the appropriate response.
What To Do When Emergency Maintenance Situations Arise
You follow first aid steps for injuries. Similarly, you should follow checklist steps when handling emergency maintenance.
Conclusion
You can't completely negate unplanned breakdowns and failures. How you handle emergency maintenance determines how soon production can be up to speed. You might determine that further training/safety measures need to be in place and the effect on future expenses.
Have an emergency maintenance plan in place, ready for those unexpected times. Make sure every employee—not just the maintenance department personnel—understands the importance of emergency maintenance and its procedures.
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