Wednesday, 24 November 2010

Truly Wireless Vibration Monitoring

Ranger Logo

Ranger Product
Truly wireless: Ranger launches today.

Our ability to remotely analyse machinery health has been greatly extended with the launch of our superior wireless technology.
Ranger is the first of our machinery health information systems that can be built as an entirely wireless installation.
With Ranger you can continuously monitor machinery in the most inaccessible environments and remotely monitor the health of essential machinery around the clock, automatically alerting you to potential problems and avoiding costly downtime. Our wireless technology makes it possible to monitor essential machinery where wiring is prohibitive.
Combine the benefits of a permanent installation with the flexibility of a portable monitoring device. Like traditional permanently mounted installations, Ranger allows you to collect data more cost effectively, more timely, and with improved accuracy compared with walk around portable routines. Eliminating wires provides flexibility and allows you to create temporary setups to focus on specific machinery with relative ease.

Permanent yet flexible

RangerNetwork
Ranger modules integrate with existing or traditional wired systems, allowing you to build the most cost effective system of wireless and wired modules specific to your facility's environment.
There’s no single way to make up a Ranger system – the size and complexity of each installation will be as unique as the companies who use them.
Features of the Ranger system include:
  • Self-healing network allows system to continue monitoring even when part of the network loses power or connection – the nearest module will connect it in to the network.
  • Dual-axis readings.
  • Wake on Hi-Vibe feature gives full control, taking pre-scheduled readings and can be set to take additional recording when pre-configured vibration levels are exceeded. This conserves battery life of wireless sensors.
  • Reduced analyst time as data is only provided when there is a problem to assess.
  • Ability to create temporary set-ups to monitor troublesome, recently repaired or new machines and collect baseline recordings for acceptance criteria.
  • High data integrity expected of a permanently connected monitoring system.
If you are interested in becoming a Ranger early adopter please get in touch with us for more information.

Friday, 5 November 2010

Fundamental Vibration Analysis Webinar

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Fundamental Vibration Analysis – Back to Basics III

by Christopher Keniston, CMRP- Customer Success Engineer

Join us for a Webinar on December 8

Space is limited.

Reserve your Webinar seat now at:

https://www1.gotomeeting.com/register/164866760

Implementing a Vibration Analysis program can be a considerable investment of time and resources. Realising a significant Return-on-Investment requires the ability to capture and interpret relevant data, then take appropriate maintenance actions. Therein lies the primary obstacle to success. Regardless of whose products are used, you must understand what the technology is showing you. Our intent is to demonstrate that a fundamental understanding of this technology does not require highly-specialised training or an advanced degree. All one really needs is familiarity with the machine being monitored.

Title: Fundamental Vibration Analysis – Back to Basics III

Date: Wednesday, December 8, 2010

Time: 3:00 PM - 4:00 PM EST

After registering you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the Webinar.

System Requirements

PC-based attendees

Required: Windows® 7, Vista, XP, 2003 Server

Macintosh®-based attendees

Required: Mac OS® X 10.4.11 (Tiger®) or newer

Wednesday, 20 October 2010

FLIR ENERGY PACK - T425 OFFER NOW ON!

FLIR_ENERGY_PACK

Time for putting the power of thermal imaging at work to for predictive maintenance inspections

FLIR Systems markets a full range for doing effective predictive maintenance inspections. High-and low voltage installations, mechanical systems, pipework and insulation and much more. It can all be fast and easily inspected with a FLIR Systems thermal imaging camera.

In order to make your predictive maintenance inspections even more effective FLIR Systems is offering the Industrial pack. It consists of:

  • FLIR T425 thermal imaging camera with an exchangeable 25° lens
  • A 15° lens: FREE OF CHARGE.
    This telescope lens provides almost 2X magnification compared to the 25° lens. Ideal for small or distant targets such as overhead power lines.
  • Extech EX845 clamp meter: FREE OF CHARGE
    The values read by the clamp meter can be wirelessly transmitted to the FLIR T425 thanks to the unique FLIR Systems MeterLink functionality.
  • Reporter software: FREE OF CHARGE
It will help you to analyse and document your findings.

Take advantage of this unique offer and Order your FLIR T425 camera today and start your predictive maintenance inspections tomorrow.

This offer can not be combined with any other FLIR Systems promotion. The offer is valid until December 31st, 2010.

You have a choice
FLIR offers a wide variety of products for predictive maintenance applications. We do this because we think that you, our customer, has the right of choice. That is exactly the reason why we are offering a full range of products.

Thursday, 16 September 2010

Fixing it before it breaks.

It’s one of the oldest jokes in manufacturing. “Why is this repair bill so high?” demands the accountant. “Twenty quid for the part; £5,980 for knowing which part,” retorts the engineer. It illustrates the simple principle governing the whole science of preventive maintenance: it’s usually a lot cheaper to replace something before it breaks than to fix it afterwards.

As manufacturing has steadily reduced manning levels and increased automation, the truth of this axiom has become even more apparent. The cost of line stoppages and lost production, especially in continuous processes, far outweighs the price of effective planning and unplanned preventive maintenance (PM). What is more, the recession has brought its own imperatives: with many companies hanging on by their fingernails, there is a real pressure to defer the replacement of plant and machinery, nursing old installations to keep them going for a while longer. It’s the kind of climate that has brought condition monitoring, one of the key ingredients of PM, into its own.

At its simplest, condition monitoring (CM) demands nothing more sophisticated than a good pair of eyes. Leaks, ear and corrosion can often be spotted by a skilled operator long before they have time to cause real trouble and, as more manufacturers develop first line maintenance to production staff, visual inspection has a vital part to play in any workplace. When, however you can’t see inside the machinery, it’s too complex to monitor visually or it is in a hazardous environment, human eyes and ears aren’t much use. For that reason, technologies like vibration monitoring, oil analysis, ultrasonic surveys and thermography have become increasingly important, either through scheduled application or, for critical equipment, through constant, real-time CM.

All rely on the collection of data about current operational performance over establishment parameters which, by comparing their compliance or deviation from an expected norm, can give early warning of problems. When failure could have serious safety implications, systems are often linked to auto shutdown functions, triggered at the first indication of trouble. The level of sophistication in monitoring systems varies hugely. Some merely record information for interpretations by a skilled engineer; others use computer analysis or even artificial intelligence to predict failure.

The capabilities of CM technology are constantly being improved. Recent product developments include a motor condition monitor system from Artesis that included wireless technology for use in remote and inaccessible locations and fully automated condition assessment reports. It has also developed a predictive maintenance system, the MCM, which uses intelligence mathematical modelling to establish a norm for each item of equipment, after which it continuously monitors the machinery for potential faults. If a fault is detected the system provides a diagnosis of mechanical and electrical problems and indicates the severity of the fault in time to highlight potential failures and to provide advance diagnostics to avoid secondary damage.

There’s no doubt that condition monitoring can be a complex business. It’s not just the actual physical monitoring, although that can demand a lot of highly specialised equipment. The collection and interpretation of the data is also taxing, requiring the kind of expertise that is rarely needed full-time in normal plant running. Many operations therefore choose to contract CM out to service companies, buying in the knowledge without the heavy investment and extra headcount. There’s nothing wrong with this provided potential problems don’t fall down the gap between external reports and internal maintenance procedures. Proviso Systems and glass manufacturer Saint-Gobain Glass UK (SGGUK) are an excellent example of how to make this kind of partnership work for all concerned.

SGGUK, winner of the Best Factory Award for process plants, is one of the leanest and most highly automated plants in the UK. The main float line runs all day every day. It feeds into a coating line that operates 24 hours a day for a seven-week campaign, with often only a three-day shutdown between for a routine maintenance. The vibration checks alone are over 3,000 points on each. “We only do some monitoring on site through the trade guys – the routine stuff that needs doing every two to three days,” explains engineer manager Mick Dickinson. “But where we want a really detailed analysis of any equipment through thermography analysis and vibration or oil analysis, we use Proviso.” Two of Proviso’s specialists are on site for six days each month for the oil analysis and vibration monitoring, and another spends four days every three months for Thermographic analysis. They submit reports after every visit. “I get a copy as well as the responsible engineer for each area,” says Dickinson. “The report highlights anything that needs looking at as a matter of urgency but we have been working with this company for so long that they don’t leave site without telling us about it face to face. Sometimes the fault has already been rectified by the time I get the report two days later.” The reports themselves flag up areas that need action at a glance. In the case of thermography reports, it also provides clear, graphical details of how the fix should be handled: “That has saved us so much time and prevented so many sudden failures.”

The really admirable part, however, is the way SGGUK dovetails its contractor’s CM recommendations into its own comprehensive preventive maintenance programme. Lean to the core, most of SGGUK’s trades people have additional production skills that absorb about 10% of their working hours. Their priority, however, is planned preventive and reactive maintenance. Dickinson says they perform PM examinations on every piece of equipment every day. Out of a 12-hour period, they might spend six or seven working through their PM task sheets – anything from a visual inspection to a full strip down and replace. “We have around 400 PMs that come out every week and we have a 97% completion rate.

When CM analysis flags up remedial action, the engineer responsible for that area raises a notification on SGGUK’s SAP system, which accumulates new jobs for allocation at the planning meetings, held every week for each line.” The meeting has representatives from all the production and engineering areas so you have the right people there to give the go ahead to stop a process or assess the priorities,” says Dickinson. The jobs are incorporated in SAP’s live labour planning sheets, which give graphical representation of PM loading, the people available for each shift and the jobs allocated to each for two or three weeks ahead. When a shift engineer arrives, he opens up the plan to see what’s been planned for him. The engineer who originally picked up the CM reports will also have left all the equipment for that job in a holding area, together with any parts he has ordered, identified by job number. “The engineer may come in completely cold from a holiday yet he will still now exactly what to do and be able to do it,” explains Dickinson. When the job is complete, the plan is updated. If it can’t be finished, the reasons are also entered. So the manager knows exactly what is happening at any time. No notification ever leaves the system until it is confirmed as completed by engineers.

Call outs in the middle of the night do still happen but they are always followed by a root cause analysis, stored in a database to help solve any similar future problems. “Hidden knowledge is not power,” Dickinson maintains. “If you can tell somebody something that stops the 3am phone calls, then tell them.”

Do this plant’s techniques for melding external monitoring with its own preventive maintenance work? Dickinson openly acknowledges that there will always be a t least two reactive breakdowns a week – not everything is predictable. But the figures speak for themselves. He is measured by plant interruptions due to maintenance breakdown expressed as yield lost. His annual target is a tough 0.4%. It is currently running at a remarkable 0.3%. Case proven.

Tuesday, 17 August 2010

Summer Trade In - Upto £7000 for your old thermal camera technology when updating to a new FLIR model.http://cot.ag/biBplP @cotweet

Friday, 23 July 2010

Summer Trade In - Upto £7000 for your old thermal camera when updating to a new FLIR model. http://cot.ag/biBplP @cotweet

Friday, 25 June 2010

Revolutionary new pricing for the FLIR i5 - http://cot.ag/biBplP @cotweet