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April 30, 2008

There’s More to Training than Skills Development

An iPresentation Tutorial by Ken Bass, CMRP, MRG
Reliability Improvement initiatives involve significant resources, take time, and are expensive to an organization. Employee training becomes an essential part to sustaining the success and gains of any Reliability initiative. But have you considered what type of training leads to success? There’s more to training than skills development. It takes more than the traditional training on re-vamped processes and methods to ensure a program’s success. It requires a more holistic approach to your Reliability Improvement training program. In this 5 minute iPresentation, Ken Bass, Field Manager will review and bring to your attention, the other aspects involved in training that you may want to consider.


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April 30, 2008

Trico Launches New Web-Based Lubrication Library

The Lubrication Library provides subscribers a central-point of reference on lubricant specifications and technical information from major lubricant suppliers. It allows users to easily build, print, and save a reference list as well as the manufacturer’s data sheets and MSDS’s.

Toll free: 800.558.7008


Find our more about the Lubrication Library

April 30, 2008

The Association for Maintenance Professionals is conducting a study to determine the interest in Uni

The Association for Maintenance Professionals is conducting a study to determine the interest in University degrees for Reliability and Maintenance.


Please take 5 minutes and complete the study by clicking here

April 30, 2008

The Development of a Local and Distance Delivered Reliability and Maintainability Engineering Master

by Wes Hines, Director, Reliability and Maintainability Engineering Program, College of Engineering, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, TN

Abstract:  This paper presents the development of a Master of Science (MS) degree program in Reliability and Maintainability Engineering at the University of Tennessee. The maintenance program at UT began a decade ago with the formation of the Maintenance and Reliability center and the academic program grew through a National Science Foundation curriculum development grant.  The academic program was initially limited to a few classes leading to undergraduate and graduate certificates.  This paper describes the curricular development process including surveys designed to measure industrial demand and presents the final MS curriculum.  Lastly, the dual delivery system, that includes a web-based distance delivery system, is presented.

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April 30, 2008

Remote Turbine Vibration Monitoring

Numerous eight to 215 megawatt electrical generators owned by Calpine Corp., San Jose, Calif., help supply the enormous amount of energy needed for the power distribution grid spread across the North American continent. And the turbine-driven generators must continuously run smoothly without much vibration; otherwise they could sustain significant damage. Machine downtime costs could easily run in the thousands of dollars per hour. So, to keep the systems up and trouble free, their vibration signatures are recorded endlessly. The experts who watch over the equipment can frequently detect an imminent failure just by noticing changes in the shape of the waveform. The data acquisition equipment that monitors the health of these generators is permanently connected to vibration sensors...More


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April 30, 2008

Has anyone found MTBF to be an Effective Metric?

From a recent Blog post at the Association for Maintenance Professionals


If anyone has found Mean Time Between Failure to be an effective metric please share the results and your recommendations to someone trying it for the first time.


Join FREE - read replies or post your own here

April 30, 2008

Web Workshop Series Schedule

Reliabilityweb.com and the Association for Maintenance Professionals are pleased to invite you to the following FREE educational workshops delivered over the Internet and telephone:

Advancing Reliability Workshop #4: History of Reliability Centered Maintenance & Rationale for RCM Variants and Derivations by Jack Nicholas Jr.

In this 4th of 12 web workshops Jack Nicholas Jr. discusses:

* The History and origins of Reliability Centered Maintenance (RCM)
* The Rational for RCM Variants and Derivations
* Key features of RCM

There are several polls conducted throughout the Web Workshop that provide a real time snap shot of attendees practices. Results will be discussed to highlight workshop lessons.

The presented material will last 50-55 minutes with extra time (30-45 minutes) set aside for questions and answers. Please allow extra time to attend if you are interested in participating in the question and answer sessions.


Reserve your Web Workshop seat now

April 30, 2008

Life Cycle Asset Management:Conception to Disposal Asset Management

An iPresentation Tutorial by Keith Mobley, Life Cycle Engineering
Effective Life Cycle Asset Management (LCAM) is a fundamental requirement—a necessity—in any well run organization. Without LCAM, a plant is forced to operate in a purely reactive mode and in total ignorance of impending risks that could result in permanent closure of the business. Over recent years, we have seen too many examples of plants, many of them profitable, that did not recognize incipient risks and as a result either closed or were seriously damaged by their failure to manage the facility’s asset and associated risks. Business is always a gamble, but that does not relieve senior management from the responsibility to manage risks and make every effort to reduce the probability of failure.


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