February, 2007
THIS ARTICLE IS COPYWRITTEN BY APPLIED TECHNOLOGY PUBLICATIONS.
Failure Avoidance Vs. Failure Prediction
You're playing in the
high-rollers' room,
now, where the stakes
are greater than ever.
This veteran of the
reliability game deals
you in on how to build
a winning hand.
Heinz P. Bloch, P.E.
Process Machinery Consulting
To some of us, Maintenance Technology is more than just the title of
an important journal. It's a vocation…a craft…an attitude…a
mindset…
and a host of other things. More than a mere cookbook of procedures to
follow, Maintenance Technology should be a thought-generator. Just
as it should adjust the reader's focus to recognize that failure prediction
is more
valuable than incurring failures without advance warning, the Maintenance
Technology concept should remind us that failure avoidance is-in many,
but clearly not all instances-the most cost-effective approach.
Based on experience
So as not to get hung up in the semantics and arguable definitions of the
issue,
let us start with a personal recollection.
In 1979, the plant to which I had been assigned in Texas was about to commission
six major turbo-compressor trains ranging up to about 60,000 HP and
approximately 5,600 rpm. Because the equipment trains incorporated contoured
diaphragm couplings, the chief machinery engineer at company headquarters
asked me to cooperate with his plans to develop coupling condition
monitoring devices. He was thinking of non-contacting telemetric means of
detecting crack formation and crack propagation in the alloy steel diaphragms.
My position was to, in the future-as had been done in this instance-purchase
couplings with generous service factors. Such couplings were known to have
torque load capacities far in excess of those delivered by the steam turbines
driving the various compressors. In essence, building safety (failure avoidance)
into the basic design at low incremental cost will very often allow us to
dispense
with some, presumably necessary, and sometimes "traditional," surveillance
requirements.
To be realistic, we concede that in the real-world environment, the reliability
professional is rarely in a position to implement best practices by himself/herself.
But, we still see it as his or her mission in life to move entire organizations
in the right direction and to find tactful ways of questioning the erroneous
mindset of the generally indifferent crowd. There is always a management
component involved and managers often only pursue short-term interests.
Short-term interests are inevitably repair-focused.
Consistently good performance and high profitability, however, require that
industrial enterprises totally abandon their repair focus and unequivocally
endorse the reliability-focused approach. Predictive maintenance should not
be embraced without forethought, because it often drifts into a "repair" focus.
Modern, reliability-focused plants must adhere to a well-formulated or even
formalized management philosophy. This is an indispensable requirement if
tangible and lasting equipment reliability improvement results are expected.
Focus on uptime improvement
Adapting the thinking of W. Edwards Deming,
the noted American statistician whose
teachings on quality and profitability often
were neglected at home, but venerated in post-
WW II Japan, we give the following advice to
the interested manager:
- Create constancy of purpose for improvement
of product, equipment and service.
Implement whatever organizational setup is
needed to move from being a repair-focused
facility to a reliability-focused one. Do this
by teaching your reliability workforce to view
every maintenance event as an opportunity
to upgrade. Furthermore, make them accept
the premise that component upgrading often
results in total failure avoidance.
- Never allow costly experimentation, or "reinventing
the wheel," when there is proof that
an upgraded component, a good technical
text or an experienced mentor could point
the way to a proven solution [Ref. 1].
- Upgrading must result in downtime avoidance
and/or maintenance cost reductions. Insist
on being apprised of both feasibility and cost
justification of suitable upgrade measures.
A professional's best guess is acceptable; the
claim that no data are available for equipment
such as pumps-among the simplest machines
on the face of the earth-shows indifference or
lack of being informed.
- Unless your problem machine is indeed the
only one in the world delivering a particular
medium from "A" to "B," insist on determining
the operating and failure experience of
satisfactory machines and mechanical components
elsewhere. That implies working only
with experienced, cooperative vendors and a
well-motivated reliability workforce.
- Adopt a new philosophy that makes mistakes
and negativism unacceptable. Ask some serious
questions when a critical process compressor
or pump repair isn't done right three
times in a row. Hold the responsible party
accountable.
- Ask the responsible worker to certify that his
or her work meets the quality and accuracy
requirements stipulated in your work procedures
and checklists.
- End the practice of awarding business to outside
shops and service providers on the basis
of price alone. Ask your reliability staff to use,
acquire or develop, technical specifications
for critical or high reliability components.
Inspect the work product of your suppliers-
you get not what you expect, but what
you inspect.
- Constantly and forever improve the system
of maintenance quality and responsiveness
of contract/outsourced service providers. You
must groom in-house reliability specialists-
they must have competence in gauging the adequacy
of maintenance quality and outsourced
services. Make them the pseudo-owners (the
accountable parties) of the equipment or
service at issue.
- Allow global procurement based on adherence
to sound specifications for critical components.
These specifications must be used by
your purchasing department. Accept cheaper
substitutes only if it can be proven that their
life-cycle costs are lower than those of the
high-reliability components specified. Translation:
Don't tolerate reliability professionals
seeking cover under the "global procurement"
excuse [Ref. 2].
- Insist on daily interaction of process/operating,
mechanical/maintenance and reliability/
technical workforces. Institutionalize root
cause failure analysis (RCFA) and make joint
RCFA sessions mandatory for these three
job functions. Do not accept this interaction
to exist only in the form of e-mail! Until you
have groomed a competent and well-trained
failure analysis team, consider engaging an
outside expert on an incentive-pay basis.
- Institute a vigorous program of training and
education. As an example: For decades, the
mechanic/machinist has been allowed to find and replace the defective pump component.
Consequently, he or she has become an entirely
repair-focused parts-changer. Train
your engineers, technicians and maintenance
workforce members to be reliability-focused!
Firmly subscribe to the belief that repair-focused
plants will soon perish!
- Institute leadership. Give guidance and direction.
Impart resourcefulness to your reliability
professionals. Become that leader or appoint
that leader. The leader must be in a position
to outline and delineate the approach to be
followed by the reliability professional in, say,
achieving extended pump run length-the
subject of many relevant texts [Ref. 3].
- Drive out fear. Initiate guidance and action
steps that show personal ethics and evenhandedness
that will be valued and respected
by your workforce. Institute both fairness and
accountability at all levels. As a manager, take
the lead. Eliminate roadblocks and impediments
to progress. Realize what it is you are
trying to do: Obtain a quantifiable increase in
plant-wide equipment uptime, in pump MTBF,
or whatever. Accept the premise that these
aims are not utopian; they have long since
been accomplished elsewhere. With good
leadership, your organization can achieve
these goals as well.
- Break down barriers between staff areas.
Never tolerate the ill-advised competition
among staff groups that causes them to withhold
pertinent information from each other.
- Eliminate numerical quotas. No reasonable
person will be able to solve 20 elusive pump
problems in a 40-hour week. If a problem is
worth solving, it's worth spending time to
solve the problem. Don't use a 50-cent solution
to solve a million-dollar problem.
- Accept the premise that an intellectual
laggard "working" 70-hour weeks may not
be as productive as a resourceful individual
who really does perform in the standard
40-hour week. Realize that the 40-hour
person, perhaps, operates at peak efficiency
because he/she recharges his motivational
batteries in his off-hours, whereas the laggard
feeds his brain on figurative junk food.
- Remove barriers to pride of workmanship.
Don't convey the message that jobs must be
done quickly. Instead, instill the drive to do
it right the first time and every time. To that
end, make available the physical tools, written
procedures, work process definitions and
checklists used by Best-of-Class companies.
Going all in

Now, let's get back to the earlier reference about
diaphragm couplings…Over many decades,
there never has been any problem with the ones
alluded to in this brief overview. It's just one of
numerous examples proving that failure avoidance
trumps failure prediction.
References
- Bloch, Heinz P., Machinery Reliability Improvement,
3rd Edition, 1998, Gulf Publishing
Company, Houston, TX (ISBN 0-88415-
661-3)
- Bloch, Heinz P., and Alan Budris, Pump User's
Handbook: Life Extension, 2nd Edition, 2006,
Fairmont Publishing Company, Lilburn, GA
(ISBN 0-88173-517-5)
- Bloch, Heinz P., and Fred Geitner, Machinery
Uptime Improvement, (2006) Elsevier-Butterworth-
Heinemann, Stoneham, MA (ISBN
0-7506-7725-2)
Frequent contributor Heinz Bloch is wellknown
to Maintenance Technology
readers. The author of 17 comprehensive
textbooks and over
340 other publications
on machinery
reliability and
lubrication, he can
be contacted directly
at: hpbloch@mchsi.com