I got to Speak at EASTEC Tuesday

Greetings,

I had a great time speaking at EASTEC Tuesday.

Here is a snippet of the talk…

Robert Kravontka

The Maintenance Geek

The Maintenance Geek is speaking at EASTEC on May 16th at 3:50 – 4:25pm

 

Please mark you calendars:   Tuesday May 16th at 3:50 pm.

Register today and get ready for the EASTEC experience, including:

  • Hundreds of exhibitors showcasing the latest technologies,
    equipment and products
  • Keynotes and technical presentations with industry leaders and experts
  • Networking opportunities to meet new contacts and develop relationships
  • Resources that can solve your company’s biggest challenges

You already know how valuable a trip to EASTEC can be for your business. Register now and mark your calendar to attend in May 2017.

Visit easteconline.com to view the exhibitor list, floor plan, featured technologies and much more.

SHOW LOCATION:
Eastern States Exposition
1305 Memorial Ave
West Springfield, MA 01089

SHOW HOURS:
Tuesday, May 16
9:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.

Wednesday, May 17
9:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.

3:50 – 4:25 come and hear the Maintenance Geek speak on the 5 steps to get out of the BREAKDOWN mode.

Thursday, May 18
9:00 a.m. – 3:00 p.m.

 

Hope to see you there.

The Maintenance Geek has been asked to speak at EASTEC in May…

site logo

May 16-18, 2017 | Eastern States  Exposition, West Springfield, Massachusetts

I was pleased to find out that I have been accepted to speak at EASTEC.

Register today and get ready for the EASTEC experience, including:

  • Hundreds of exhibitors showcasing the latest technologies,
    equipment and products
  • Keynotes and technical presentations with industry leaders and experts
  • Networking opportunities to meet new contacts and develop relationships
  • Resources that can solve your company’s biggest challenges

You already know how valuable a trip to EASTEC can be for your business. Register now and mark your calendar to attend in May 2017. Simply click here to update your contact information and complete your EASTEC 2017 registration.

Visit easteconline.com to view the exhibitor list, floorplan, featured technologies and much more.

SHOW LOCATION:
Eastern States Exposition
1305 Memorial Ave
West Springfield, MA 01089

SHOW HOURS:
Tuesday, May 16
9:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.

Wednesday, May 17
9:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.

Thursday, May 18
9:00 a.m. – 3:00 p.m.

Thanks,

Robert

The Maintenance Geek

5 Steps to a World Class Maintenance Organization is available

5 Steps to a World Class Maintenance Organization for the Small Manufacturer

5 Steps to a World Class Maintenance Organization for the Small Manufacturer

Are your best maintenance professionals ready to retire? 

Do your younger people need to work smarter not harder?

In General, breakdowns are 5 to 10 times more expensive that preventing it in the first place.

 

My new book 5 Steps to a World Class Maintenance Organization is out and available on Amazon.com   http://amzn.to/2c78hia

If you want a signed copy send me an e mail at:    robert@maintenancegeek.com

I will get it out to you quickly.      Let me know who and where.

Here are some highlights of what to expect.

Step 1:  Rank your Equipment and collect some simple data.

Step 2: Control your critical spare parts.

Step 3 Stop Wasted PMs

Step 4 Focused Improvement  Events

Step 5 Formal Training

Step 5 of the 5 Steps to a World Class Maintenance Organization

Are your best maintenance professionals ready to retire? Snapshot_24

Do your younger people need to work smarter not harder?

In General breakdowns are 5 to 10 times more expensive that preventing it in the first place.

 

My new book 5 Steps to a World Class Maintenance Organization is in final proof

Here are some highlights or what to expect.

Step 1:  Rank your Equipment and collect some simple data.

5 Steps to a World Class Maintenance Organization for the Small Manufacturer

5 Steps to a World Class Maintenance Organization for the Small Manufacturer

Step 2: Control your critical spare parts.

Step 3 Stop Wasted PMs

Step 4 Focused Improvement  Events

Step 5 Formal Training

90% of all present maintenance professionals are not formally trained

World Class Maintenance shows up directly in the Bottom Line. Fight for budget money with Dollar Based Arguments. The nuts and bolts guys must be able to talk to the brains and bucks guys to show the value of a world class maintenance program. Typically manufacturers see a 10 times increase in production to training dollar expended.

Assess your skills gap.

Set goals and prioritize the path to filling your skills gaps.

Out Source some of your Maintenance Duties. Effective PM’s can be done by the equipment manufacturers, and they can help you develop a program your people can follow. There are many companies offering this service on a contract basis.

Look for funding for maintenance training. It is available at many Department of labor offices and your state MEPs.  (Manufacturing Extension Partnerships).

5 Steps to a World Class Maintenance Organization is ready to be published, in August 2016.

Send me a note if you would like a discounted signed copy when it comes out.

 

Thanks,

Robert Kravontka

The Maintenance Geek

robert@maintenancegeek.com

cropped-snapshot_001.jpg

 

Step 4 of the 5 steps to a world class maintenance organization.

Step 1:  Rank your Equipment and collect some simple data.

5 Steps to a World Class Maintenance Organization for the Small Manufacturer

5 Steps to a World Class Maintenance Organization for the Small Manufacturer

Step 2: Control your critical spare parts.

Step 3 Stop Wasted PMs

Step 4 Focused Improvement Events 

 Set up an event with one of your most critical pieces of equipment.  Who should be the Players in your focused improvement event?  Maintenance Personnel , Operations Management,  Operators,  Engineering, Finance, Material handlers, getting someone from the “C” suite will add a lot of credibility to the program.

Develop the “keep it running” mindset vs the “fix it when it breaks” historic plan.

Sit back and look at these critical pieces of equipment, once you have them  running in like new condition, ask what it will take to keep them running? Not what do we need to keep on hand to fix it the next time it goes down.

The focused improvement event plan is to shut it down, take it apart, clean it, then put it back together in like new condition. Put it in its most productive state.

Now the goal will be to develop countermeasures to contamination, lubrication and access.

Here is what you should include in a typical focused improvement event:

  • Put together a cross functional team.
  • Measure and calculate OEE.
  • Your goal is zero equipment stoppages.
  • Measure your repetitive failures
  • Open up the equipment
  • Look for:
    • Contamination
    • Lack of Lubrication or too much lubrication
    • Air Leaks
  • Stabilize the equipment
  • Put countermeasures in place to keep equipment in like new condition
  • Close up the equipment.

Duplicate this effort on the next most critical machines

Here is an example of a walk around sheet with visuals to help even new operators see what they are looking for, and alert maintenance when something of out of spec..visual walkaround1

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

5 Steps to a World Class Maintenance Organization is ready to be published, in August 2016.

Send me a note if you would like a discounted signed copy.

 

Thanks,

Robert Kravontka

The Maintenance Geek

robert@maintenancegeek.com

cropped-snapshot_001.jpg

Step 3 of the 5 steps in Developing a World Class Maintenance Organization

Snapshot_24Step 1:  Rank your Equipment and collect some simple data.

Step 2: Control your critical spare parts.

Step 3 Stop Wasted PMs

Typically 50% of PM’s are wasted.

An example would be doing a PM in an electrical panel, the goal is to tighten the 100 or so connections, typically 1 or 2 will need tightening. This is mind numbing work, and can lead to damaged connectors.  Unintended consequences. If predictive tools were used, like an infra-red camera, only the 1 or 2 connections would need to be tightened,  and the broken connector would have been avoided.7

Predictive Equipment:

Ultra Sound for air leaks, proper bearing lubrication, and steam trap health.

Infra-Red for motor life, any motor over 150 degrees needs to be watched, motor life drops off exponentially with each 20 degrees of temperature increase. Loose electrical connections, are a safety and fire hazard. Process anomalies like furnace insulation, along with facility monitoring like roofs and air infiltration can pay for the equipment with lower energy costs.

Oil Analysis to extend intervals between changes. Accomplish this by a route based oil testing program.

Vibration Analysis to predict a host of motor, connector, and bearing issues.

Operators can be very predictive. They must own their machines and communicate the health of their machines to maintenance.

This picture is a Zebra card that shows oil level. This also shows quality, as it is not milky or speckled with contaminants, or discolored from  heat. Zebra Cards

Get trained in Oil Analysis, Thermography, Vibration and Ultrasound. There is lots of free training available from the equipment manufacturers. You can hire this equipment out or rent it.

 

Want to know more, go to the upper right and sign up for the next exciting episode of the Maintenance Geek Blog.

Look out for my upcoming book.   5 steps to a World Class Maintenance Organization.

 

cropped-snapshot_001.jpgRobert Kravontka

The Maintenance Geek

robert@maintenancegeek.com

 

Does your business have a good plan to Grow? How the Business Sustainability Challenge can help!

 What is the “Business Sustainability Challenge” and why should I care?BSC

New England Utilities offer the Business sustainability Challenge. With a small team your company can become more competitive by taking a strategic look at Energy, Workforce, Operations, and Waste Streams. Results from this planning include reducing risks and leveraging opportunities to shield your company from, changes in the economy, while improving operations and profitability. The utility will fund this effort 100% and offer incentives to grow along the way. You need to supply a small team, 3-5 people to develop a growth strategy with help from some of the great teachers in the industry.

Send me a note, and I will send you a form, to see if your company qualifies.

We have seen some great results.  Let me know if you want to find out more.

 

Robert                                                                                                                                                          The Maintenance Geek

snapshot_001Click in the upper right to sign up for the blog series.

What is OEE and how can it help you?

OEE what do you do with it?

OEE stands for “Overall Equipment Effectiveness” and is an important metric for many companies’ initiatives to establish “Operational Excellence.” There are many different definitions for OEE but it is largely understood to be a composite metric based on three different areas of a particular asset’s performance.

Here is a great video on OEE.

A great explanation of OEE, or Overall Equipment Effectiveness… Fuss and O’Neill Manufacturing Solution’s president John Kravontka details the proper use of OEE data.