Your RCM Checklist: A Function-Focused Guide to Optimal Reliability

Noria Media
Tags: reliability-centered maintenance, continuous improvement, maintenance and reliability, workplace safety

Your RCM Checklist: A Function-Focused Guide to Optimal Reliability

To continually increase operational efficiency and strategically reduce downtime, industrial facilities invest in various maintenance strategies that go beyond reactive repairs and quick fixes. One tool that has proven its effectiveness is Reliability-Centered Maintenance (RCM). 
 
By understanding the foundations of RCM, the benefits and potential challenges of this approach, and what is required for successful implementation, maintenance and reliability teams can develop a program focused on enhancing reliability, reducing costs, and improving overall asset performance.
 

What is Reliability-Centered Maintenance?

Reliability-Centered Maintenance (RCM) is the systematic technique of optimizing a maintenance process to increase critical equipment's uptime and production capacity by analyzing breakdowns and determining proper maintenance requirements within that asset's unique operating environment.

Although its roots can be traced back to the aviation industry, RCM has quickly become a staple in many manufacturing facilities in every sector. Unlike other maintenance approaches that work on fixed schedules or run-to-failure strategies, RCM is considered function-oriented; it looks at each individual asset before assigning the appropriate maintenance tasks.

When implementing RCM, a maintenance team should ask itself several questions to identify key characteristics of an asset. These questions include:

The Benefits of Reliability-Centered Maintenance

Implementing an RCM program can provide several benefits to a maintenance team’s critical assets. These benefits include:

The benefits above can easily translate into visible improvements throughout a facility. By implementing an RCM program, facilities generally experience fewer unplanned breakdowns, leading to increased production throughput, reduced waste in multiple categories, lower maintenance costs, and more efficient operations.

These principles can be applied to nearly any asset within a facility, fostering a culture of continuous improvement that is centered on proactive maintenance.

The Challenges of Reliability-Centered Maintenance

While there are a host of benefits, as with any reliability program, a team trying to implement RCM can encounter potential challenges. These challenges include:

RCM Implementation Checklist

Effectively implementing an RCM program relies on several critical steps.

  1. Selecting the critical assets: Identify and prioritize the essential assets significantly impacting production, cost, and employee safety.
  2. Building a cross-functional team: Assemble a team consisting of employees from various sectors, including maintenance, operations, engineering, and other relevant stakeholders who hold in-depth knowledge of the prioritized assets.
  3. Gathering data and information: Collect all necessary data, including asset history, maintenance records, failure mode data, asset operating context, design specifications, and relevant industry standards.
  4. Performing a functional analysis: Define each prioritized asset's functions, purpose, and performance standards within its specific operating context and environment.
  5. Performing a failure mode and effects analysis (FMEA): Systematically identify all the potential functional failures, their failure modes, and the effects each failure would have on team safety, operations, the environment, and the facility’s bottom line.
  6. Designing and developing maintenance tasks: Based on the FMEA results, decide on the maintenance tasks necessary to prevent each significant failure mode. Consider multiple forms of tasks, including predictive, preventive, and even reactive where appropriate. Teams may also need to consider design or procedural changes to accommodate this.
  7. Documenting the plan: Document the findings and results of this analysis, the identified maintenance tasks, maintenance task frequencies, and team members who should be responsible for each task.
  8. Implementing the plan: Begin implementing the documented maintenance tasks, allowing time for proper training and resource allocation.
  9. Reviewing and refining: Periodically review the effectiveness of the RCM plan by tracking asset performance, analyzing failure data, and making the required adjustments to optimize the maintenance program. Done right, this will eventually become part of a larger culture of continuous improvement.
  10. Expanding the implementation: Once the program proves successful and all hurdles have been mitigated, gradually expand the RCM process beyond the initial critical assets to other priority assets within the facility.

Conclusion

Reliability-Centered Maintenance can offer a unique approach to protecting and managing critical industrial assets. By shifting the focus from reactive equipment maintenance to proactively preserving the integrity of critical asset functions, a maintenance and reliability team can produce significant and long-lasting benefits in terms of reliability, cost reduction, team member safety, and overall equipment efficiency.

While RCM implementation often requires upfront investments and commitments, the rewards of a long-standing program can significantly outweigh these costs. For industrial facilities in every sector looking to improve operational efficiency and safeguard productivity, utilizing RCM can provide a fundamental roadmap towards building a reliable, high-performing operation. 

Supplier Spotlight

AssetWatch 60 Collegeview Rd., Westerville, OH 43081 844-464-5652 | www.assetwatch.com

Predictive maintenance has never been easier or more cost-effective, thanks to end-to-end condition monitoring from AssetWatch. With remote wireless sensors, advanced AI, and CAT III+ experts—all for a low monthly subscription—your team will have the power to conquer unplanned downtime for good. Try us risk free for 30 days, and start seeing value on day one.

RelaWorks 1328 E. 43rd Court, Tulsa, OK 74145 918-392-5058 | RelaWorks.com

Finding the right products can be difficult. Every industry and application is unique. Over-spending and guess work is common. At RelaWorks, we help reliability professionals solve this challenge. Our mission is to provide products for your unique needs and budget. Backed by Noria Corporation’s expertise and legendary customer service, we’re excited to help your reliability program succeed.

LubePM 1328 E. 43rd Court, Tulsa, OK 74105 800-597-5460 | LubePM.com

As a Lubrication Management System (LMS) engineered by lubrication professionals, LubePM helps an organization create accountability to ensure that every lubrication point is carefully maintained, inspected and measured. Ready to take your facility’s Lubrication Management System to the next level with LubePM? We’re ready to help. Simply request more information or schedule a demo.