New equipment that's built for lube excellence

Jim Fitch, Noria Corporation
Tags: maintenance and reliability

Has it ever occurred to you that it’s often necessary to specifically ask your original equipment manufacturer (OEM) to add modern lubrication to the bill-of-material when you purchase equipment from that company? Have you ever thought about selecting and specifying equipment based on life expectancy and life-cycle cost as opposed to just the initial cost?

Maybe this is a more familiar scenario: Your OEM includes high-performance filters, breathers and modern sampling hardware as standard items on its equipment. However, your bargain-hunting purchasing agent perceives this as “building the ticket” and asks how much less the equipment would cost without these items. After getting a better price (his goal), the purchasing agent replies, “good . . . sell it to us without the premium filters, breathers and modern sampling hardware.”

Many purchasing agents earn bonuses based on their performance in driving down the purchase cost of equipment. However, these agents are never asked to pay back their bonuses when, later, this same equipment experiences high maintenance costs and frequent failures. A better purchasing strategy for companies is to minimize the life-cycle cost of ownership. When you buy cheap, you are often buying problems. Compounding the issue, once a lowest-price specification is in place, companies tend to buy the same problems again and again.

It’s not the initial cost of the equipment that matters but rather the life-cycle cost (operating costs, maintenance, energy consumption, etc.). Consider the breakdown of the typical life-cycle cost of a common centrifugal pump compared to what might be achieved if modern lubrication hardware and better seals were included.

Costs After
Five Years
Typical
Modern Lubrication
Initial Purchase Cost
$6,000 - 15%
$6,500 - 22%
Maintenance
$12,000 - 30%

$2,500 - 8%
Energy
$16,000 - 40%
$15,000 - 50%
Other
$6,000 - 15%
$6,000 - 20%
Total (Life-Cycle Cost)
$40,000 - 100%
$30,000 - 100%
Table 1

In Table 1, modern lubrication and better seals result in an increase in the initial purchase price of $500. For people who buy equipment, this may seem rather unsavory and not the bargain they hoped for. However, for those who view overall long-term business performance, it’s a financial windfall! Actually, more like the goose that laid the golden egg. Put in $500 today and, five years later, get $10,000 in return. This is equivalent to earning a compounded interest rate of 111 percent on a passbook savings account. The net present value on the $500 is approximately $7,727 based on a discount rate of 5 percent. Not bad! Put another way, for those who pretend to save money by buying equipment stripped to the bones: $500 saved is not $500 earned, but rather $7,727 forfeited.

Next, let’s talk about what it costs to buy equipment not properly equipped by the OEM for modern lubrication. When this happens, the maintenance staff is left to engineer, source, buy and retrofit the necessary hardware onsite. Back to the pump example and that initial cost increment of $500. This is what you pay when these parts are included in the original bill-of-material. When this same hardware is purchased and later retrofitted onsite, the cost can increase to $3,000 or higher. Why? Users are not equipment builders and don’t purchase in volume. Aftermarket parts can cost many times more than preassembled machines or systems, not to mention the assembly labor. Take, for instance, that centrifugal pump; it costs approximately 3.5 times more than a preassembled new pump when purchased piece by piece. Even more interesting is an automobile. Bought piece by piece, it costs 17 times more than an assembled one on the showroom floor.

Return on net assets
One factor not considered in the centrifugal pump example is machine availability (uptime) and productivity. When machines are better lubricated, they require less maintenance, as well as less downtime to perform the maintenance tasks and associated repairs. This is perhaps best visualized in the example below showing a metric known as return on net assets (RONA):

RONA = Revenue - Expenses / Net Assets

Let’s discuss each of the variables.

Revenue: A machine can generate revenue only when it is operating. Increased uptime means the machine makes more widgets (BTUs, tons of steel, etc.). When lubrication is at best practice, machines are more productive and revenue increases.

Expenses: This includes energy, maintenance costs (repairs and preventive maintenance), spare parts, etc. When lubrication is at best practice, expenses decrease.

Net assets: This is the cost of machinery and equipment, including modifications, less depreciation. When machines are accessorized for proper lubrication by the OEM and not by the maintenance staff, this decreases net assets.

What’s interesting is that good lubrication practices affect all three parameters, and in the right way: revenue increases, expenses decrease and factory-installed lubrication accessories reduce net assets. The collective effect is an increase in RONA.

Factory-installed modern lubrication
Many OEMs include only the minimum equipment for lubrication as a part of the original bill-of-material. Anything else is optional and, therefore, frequently left off the ticket. These options add to the cost but may generate real value when selected. What follows is a list of lubrication-related hardware and accessories that, where suitable for a particular machine and application, could be factory installed:

Inspection

Oil sampling and analysis

Contamination control

Instrumentation (where practical, needed)

Lubrication

Documentation

Conclusion
The best lubrication programs, often referred to as world class, are those that have world-class lubrication technicians, use world-class lubricants and deploy world-class procedures. What must be included is the need for factory-installed, world-class lubrication equipment and devices. It’s time to talk to your equipment supplier.

Jim Fitch is the president and co-founder of Noria Corporation. Contact him at jfitch@noria.com or 918-749-1400. To learn more about proper machinery lubrication practices, visit www.machinerylubrication.com and www.noria.com.

Reference
Mackay, Ross. “Current Best Reliability and Maintenance Practices of Pumps and Pump Systems.” Results-Oriented Reliability Maintenance Conference. Raleigh, N.C. November 2002.