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Introduction to the course

Introduction to the course. It’s Learning. It’s learning is the learning platform for this course Course material, i.e., course compendium, overheads, exercises and Excel programs Important information Submission of exercises (home work) Exam (for Continuing Education Course).

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Introduction to the course

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  1. Introduction to the course

  2. It’s Learning • It’s learning is the learning platform for this course • Course material, i.e., course compendium, overheads, exercises and Excel programs • Important information • Submission of exercises (home work) • Exam (for Continuing Education Course)

  3. Learning objectives • What is maintenance optimization • Skills in using a set of standard optimization models • Interval optimization • Optimization of renewal • Spare part optimization • Understanding basic principles in building models • Use MS Excel for “standard situations” • Introduction to the “art of maintenance grouping” • Statistical analysis of data

  4. Outline of the course • First gathering • Basic idea of optimization • Failure models • Grouping of maintenance activities • Data analysis • Intermediate period • Exercises/homework • Second gathering • Repetition • RCM • Prioritization of renewal projects/LCC modelling

  5. Definitions • Maintenance • The combination of all technical and administrative actions, including supervision actions, intended to retain an item in, or restore to, a state in which it can perform a required function • Preventive maintenance • The maintenance carried out at predetermined intervals or according to prescribed criteria and intended to reduce the probability of failureor the degradation of the functioning of an item • Corrective maintenance • The maintenance carried out after fault recognition and intended to put an item into a state in which it can perform a required function • Maintenance optimization • Balancing the cost and benefit of maintenance

  6. Scope of maintenance optimization • Deciding the amount of preventive maintenance (i.e. choosing maintenance intervals) • Deciding whether to do first line maintenance (on the cite), or depot maintenance • Choosing the right number of spare parts in stock • Preparedness with respect to corrective maintenance • Time of renewal • Grouping of maintenance activities

  7. Discussion topic • Identify areas within your organisation where maintenance optimisation is of interest

  8. “Maintenance theory” • The bath tub curve is a basis for choosing maintenance activities • There are two such curves • The hazard rate for ”local time” • The failure intensity for ”global time” • Combining the two:

  9. Performance loss  The hazard rate for local time is appropriate for components such as light bulbs in the signalling system. Methods are RCM and FMEA  Rail grinding is a maintenance activity to extend the life length of the rails. JBV method=LCC.  Point replacement of sleepers is a mean to postpone the complete renewal of sleepers. JBV method=LCC.  Complete renewal will be required at some point of time. JBV method=LCC.

  10. Preventive maintenance and RCM • In this course we have main focus on preventive maintenance (PM) • Maintenance optimization is thus more or less the same as establishing an optimal maintenance program • Reliability Centred Maintenance (RCM) is often considered to be the “best” approach in this context • RCM is a systematic consideration of system functions, the way functions can fail, and a priority–based consideration of safety and economics that identifies applicable and effective PM tasks

  11. Renewal and Life Cycle Cost • As the system deteriorates, traditional preventive maintenance activities could not bring the system to a satisfactory state • Renewal of the entire system, or part of the system is required • The cost of renewal is often very large  we need formalised methods to determine when to perform renewal • In this course we will present methods for optimum renewal strategies based on LCC modelling • The following dimensions are included in the LCC model: • safety costs • punctuality costs • maintenance & operational costs • cost due to increased residual life length • project costs

  12. Effective failure rate • This effective failure rate is the failure rate we would experience if we (preventive) maintain a component at a given level • Notation: E = E() • E is the effective failure rate •  is the maintenance interval

  13. Effective failure rate and optimization • There are two challenges • First we want to establish the relation  = E() depending on the (component) failure model we are working with • Next, we need to specify a cost model to optimise • The cost model will generally involve system models as fault tree analysis, Markov analysis etc. This enables us to find the optimum maintenance intervals in a two step procedure

  14. Introductory example • Component model • Effective failure rate is given by  = E() =  /100 •  is the maintenance interval • Total cost of a component failure • CMCost = 10 • Corrective maintenance cost including loss of production during the repair period • Cost per preventive maintenance action carried • PMCost = 1 • The total cost per unit time • C() = PMCost /  + CMCostE() = 1 /  +  /10

  15. Solutions • Graphical • MS Excel Solver • Analytical

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