michaelha
Mechanical
- Dec 27, 2013
- 5
Hello Everyone,
The company I work for recently started a new Reliability and Maintenance Engineering department, which 3 engineers including myself (1 chemical, 2 mechanical) have been transferred to. This will be the first time all of us have worked specifically on reliability/maintenance issues. We have been talking a lot about what steps we need to take in order to develop a solid foundation for the department, as well as learning techniques to ensure a proper system for all of our equipment.
The reason I am posting this thread is to seek information/advice from experienced Reliability Engineers for a new, developing department. Also, I am aware there are Asset Care Plan templates and FMEA software to help with failure analysis, so any recommendations would be great!
What we have now:
Preventative Maintenance program (inefficient)
New Mechanical Integrity program (Thermal imaging, vessel/piping thickness tests... also inefficient)
Thank you all,
Mike
The company I work for recently started a new Reliability and Maintenance Engineering department, which 3 engineers including myself (1 chemical, 2 mechanical) have been transferred to. This will be the first time all of us have worked specifically on reliability/maintenance issues. We have been talking a lot about what steps we need to take in order to develop a solid foundation for the department, as well as learning techniques to ensure a proper system for all of our equipment.
The reason I am posting this thread is to seek information/advice from experienced Reliability Engineers for a new, developing department. Also, I am aware there are Asset Care Plan templates and FMEA software to help with failure analysis, so any recommendations would be great!
What we have now:
Preventative Maintenance program (inefficient)
New Mechanical Integrity program (Thermal imaging, vessel/piping thickness tests... also inefficient)
Thank you all,
Mike