Friday, February 24, 2017

Condition Monitoring Expert Tip #3 - Criticality Analysis is Critical

How do you decide which assets should be monitored? How do you decide whether you can justify the use of more than one technology? Criticality analysis provides a means to prioritize which assets will be monitored and how much effort will be put in to collecting data and performing the analysis.

Criticality analysis considers several factors. It will consider the consequences of failure, for example health and safety, harm to the environment, downtime and production losses, availability of spares, cost of spares, etc. It will also consider the reliability of the asset; how likely is it to develop a fault condition. And it should also consider the detectability of the fault conditions. Therefore, an unreliable asset where failure would lead to dire consequences and where we currently cannot detect the onset of failure absolutely requires condition monitoring and can justify multiple technologies. At the other extreme, a reliable asset’s minimal consequences of failure may not require any condition monitoring; we may employ “run to failure”.


Criticality analysis enables you to make the best use of your limited resources.

This tip is provided by Jason Tranter, Managing Director of Mobius Institute.

For more condition monitoring tips, continue to visit the IMVAC – International Machine Vibration Analysis Conference – blog every week. To learn more about IMVAC and the event nearest to you, visit vibrationconference.com.





1 comment:

  1. Applications of Liquid Level Sensor
    Liquid level sensor
    Liquid level sensor give measures concerning the substance of storehouses, tanks, boilers, tanks, wells blacks and other compartment of liquid and strong material.

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