Apply the power of Condition Monitoring and gain control of your equipment
About this Event
*Virtual Option Available*Condition Monitoring Fundamentals
Apply the power of Condition Monitoring and gain control of your equipment
This course is designed to teach the fundamental principles of the five predictive technologies most prevalent in the industry today: vibration analysis, infrared thermography, airborne and structure-borne ultrasonics, oil analysis, and motor circuit analysis. Upon completion of the course, attendees will have an understanding of the capabilities of the technologies and where to apply them, along with the common traps that may be encountered during application.
During the in-class time, you will learn:
- The principles of Condition Monitoring (CM) and why it is so powerful
- The real purpose of CM and what it provides the organization
- The common language of CM – key terms and definitions you should know
- The value of CM program integration into an overall reliability plan
- How to select the CM technology based on failure modes to be covered
- What quartile coverage is and how is it used
- How to identify mechanical, electrical, and stationary failure modes using CM technologies
- The common traps of each CM technology
- What sensory inspections are and their value in a CM route
- What an asset health matrix is and how to use it
- How to evaluate your CM program
- How much CM is enough – what you can learn from Best Practice organizations and benchmarks
- What CM program standards should be in place for consistency and sustainment
Previous Attendees:
"...I enjoyed the class immensely and I’ve recommended your courses to our corporate training department. You guys are clearly the experts in the field and I would love to find a way to work with you guys more in moving our maintenance practices further from PM towards PdM."
Eric Phillips, ZBS Maintenance | Anheuser-Busch, Inc.
"The instructor was extremely knowledgeable about all aspects of CBM. He can certainly take someone from one level to the next in knowledge."
Brian Mosley, Maintenance Manager | Kraft Foods
Who Will Join You?
Managers, Engineers, Planners and Supervisors who are responsible for metrics, tracking and use of information generated by CM programs.
This course qualifies for 2.4 CEUs from the University of Tennessee’s Reliability and Maintainability Center (RMC) and is approved for course credit towards the Reliability and Maintainability Implementation Certification (RMIC).
Register Today!
Please send any questions about this class or Allied’s Education & Training offerings to [email protected].
Event Venue & Nearby Stays
Allied Reliability, 4401 Leeds Ave, Charleston, United States
USD 1507.50