RCM Ii: Reliability-Centred Maintenance II
RCM Ii: Reliability-Centred Maintenance II
RCM Ii: Reliability-Centred Maintenance II
RCM II is best
implemented by review
teams made up of the
people who know the
equipment best
Greater Safety
and
Environmental
Integrity
Enhanced
Risk
Management
Optimised
Asset
Availability
and Reliability
The Failure
Consequences are
then determined and
the appropriate
Failure Management
Policy or Default
Action selected for
each Failure Mode
Improved
Quality and
Customer
Service
Longer Useful
Asset Life
Comprehensive
Database
The application of the RCM II methodology ensures that all the
issues are fully understood by the review team and the
organisation
The landmark development in the history of RCM was Stan Nowlan and
Howard Heaps 1978 report "Reliability-centred Maintenance", which
remains the basis of RCM II. RCM was rapidly taken up by other
industries, including transport, petro-chemical, mining, steel making,
manufacturing, and utilities.
RCM II: a process used to determine the maintenance
requirements of any physical asset in its operating context
Better
Teamwork
Transparency
of Process with
Audit Trail
An Integrated
Framework
Hidden Failures: Hidden failures are functional failures which will not be
evident in normal circumstances, and usually concern protective devices which
are not fail safe.
Safety or Environmental: Failures that could hurt or kill someone, or lead
to the breach of an environmental standard.
Greater
Maintenance
Cost
Effectiveness
and Efficiency
Greater
Motivation of
Individuals
The fifth of the seven questions asks how does each failure matter, since it is a
basic tenet of RCM II that what we are trying to avoid is the consequences of
each failure, rather than the failure itself. For any task to be worth doing, it must
be able to deal successfully with the consequences of failure. In RCM II, the
Failure Consequences are:
Operational: Where the functional failure will have some adverse effect on
operational capability.
Failure Consequences
The RCM II process asks the seven questions over leaf for each asset or
system in its operating context. This is because RCM II recognises
that if we use identical assets differently, then their maintenance
requirements will also differ.
The first four of seven questions are answered on the RCM II Information
sheet (or FMEA)
Functions: what functions and performance standards do the users of
the asset want in its present operating context?
Functional Failures: in what ways can the asset fail to do what the
users want?
Failure Modes: what can cause each Functional Failure?
Three Day Introductory RCM II Programme, for review team members and
others interested in learning more about RCM II.
Reliability-centred Maintenance II
Reliability-centred
Maintenance:
II
RCM
the foundation of
advanced asset
management technologies,
processes, systems
and responsible
physical asset
custodianship
The Asset Partnership Pty Ltd
Suite 1, 2 Culdees Road, BURWOOD NSW 2136
ACN 085 562 483