How do you grow into the factory of the future with your current equipment?

This article was originally written for

The Factory of the Future web site: https://factoryofthefuture.org

by Robert Kravontka a.k.a The Maintenance Geek

You have been blessed with some great orders, so right now you need to increase production with the equipment you have.

The new equipment dealers tell you to buy their equipment and finance it.

They say new equipment has the ability to talk to each other and tell you when maintenance is required, then generate reports.

We believe your maintenance people can help get your old equipment running more productively into the future with the proper use of sensors for preventive and predictive maintenance. This can be accomplished by using The Industrial Internet of Things, or IIoT, to send a text when an event occurs.

These sensors will reduce breakdowns so your production automatically increases.  You also can develop the ability to run some of your equipment un-manned during off shifts. This happens when, sensors text you, or your maintenance people if your equipment runs out of material or stops early in the shift, you can make a decision to send someone in, or go in yourself to restart the equipment.

Sensors can look for amperage, voltage, presence/distance, hours, cycles, and a host of other conditions.

The giant manufacturers are starting to do this on a large scale. Smaller manufacturers need to start because the benefits are well worth the effort.

You can upgrade your existing equipment without spending a lot of money.

Sensor technology costs are continuing to drop all the time, typically requiring around $250.00 worth of equipment per unit.

Start with your most critical 3 or 4 machines:

Set up an hour meter, so you know when the equipment is actually running, you can receive a text message when it stops, even off shifts. A total hour figure will also tell you when it is time to schedule some preventive maintenance, instead of using less effective calendar-based scheduling.

Next put on a cycle counter so you can be alerted when milestone production numbers are achieved, thus stopping from overrunning a job to get to the end of the shift. This number can also be useful for maintenance to use condition-based service verses reactive maintenance or waiting until your equipment breaks down completely and expensively.

These sensors can be especially helpful for stamping operations and molding operations. Tools for these operations are typically dumb stand-alone units. A cycle counter can text your tool maker when a tool reaches time to sharpen, so they can generate a work order for the tool room.  This helps level the work load in the tool room, reduce unnecessary inspection time, and increase wrench time. This is better than the alternative of waiting for a shutdown period to sharpen all the tools, which only allows repair of your high priority tools, with the balance getting a cursory look.

When the tool is changed the setup, person hits the reset button on the sensor and starts counting cycles for the next tool. A laptop can change the counter total if required. The tool room can determine if the total cycles are to short or too long, then mark it on the tool. The same thing holds true for injection molding tools. For your maintenance department and tool room it is equivalent to doing pm’s while the equipment is running. This system can eliminate manual tick sheets which are often inaccurate.

A next step can be to put on a sensor to measure the amperage load of this critical equipment, this tells you if the load starts to climb, so you can begin to troubleshoot the actual cause.  If you can plan your maintenance instead of reacting to breakdowns, you can reduce maintenance costs and improve equipment output, at the same time.

By logging your amperage draw on a 24-hour basis you may find ways to reduce your energy bill by determining your equipment is still drawing substantial power even when it is not producing any parts. This action can pay for the entire sensor program.

These cell phone messaging sensors can communicate via wifi in the shop, if available and secure, or by sim card cell service, or FM radio to a receiver in the office tied to the internet. Because messages are sent as soon as an event occurs, you get immediate feedback on your equipment condition. These sensors can be a simple as micro switches, magnetic or hall effect sensors, clamp on amp meters, temperature, presence and vibration sensors.

Buy tracking some simple properties on your critical equipment you can increase production, reduce maintenance costs and cut your energy bills.

The goal is to automate your critical dumb assets by the use of sensors to track whatever will give you the data you need to be proactive and predictive with your maintenance dollars.

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www.maintenancegeek.com

Robert Kravontka

(203) 510 – 8375

Visit us; Booth 51 at the Waterbury Chamber of Commerce Business Expo April 29th 2019 at the Aquaturf in Southington, CT.

Greetings,

The Maintenance Geek LLC is showing at the Waterbury Chamber
of Commerce meeting next Monday night April 29th at the Aquaturf in
Southington BOOTH #51.

To register please go this site:   
http://web.waterburychamber.com/events/April-Out-for-Business-at-The-Aqua-Turf-Club-2966/details
and use code 2019EXPO to get the $10.00 admission for free.

There will be over 100 exhibitors and over 400 attendees! 
Complimentary hors d’oeuvres, beer and wine will be served.

Looking forward to seeing you at the booth.

Just got approved by Eversource to fund my Air Leak Surveys

The Maintenance Geek LLC  has been approved…

Energy costs are quickly going up.   Our no risk plan.   We will come to your facility, conduct an Ultrasound audit of your compressed air system including reports and tagging. If we do not find issues there is no charge.   If we do find air leak costs, we will charge 50% of the dollars saved up to your exposure of $1400.00 for a system of over 50 HP and under 100 HP. We will also offer a proposal to repair these leaks off hours when possible. I have been fortunate enough to get Eversource to fund 50% of your cost for this program. In a facility of this size we typically find $3,500.00 to $8,500.00 per year in air leaks.

For $700.00 we can come in and find and tag and report your air leaks.  Eversource is also willing to pay 40% of the cost to repair all your leaks whether you fix then or I do.

Approved by Eversource to fund air leak surveys

Approved by Eversource to fund air leak surveys

What can you find on an air leak study that you do not expect?

I was shocked to hear an electrical panel growling, as I passed by during an air leak study recently.  Because Carona and air leaks are on nearly the same frequency the shop was full of competing air leak sounds through the headphones.  As I passed the electrical panel a growling noise  came up and lead me to the panel.  I pulled out the infrared camera and here is what I saw…

 

7Not only were some of the breakers running hot, but we saw a wire arching…  We saw this right through the panel cover…

A work order for was generated immediately.

Although we were looking for air leaks, this safety issues took center stage.