
Maintenance 4.0: How digitalisation will simplify maintenance.
The fourth industrial revolution comes with many new digitalisation and automation opportunities many companies are already making use of. And with good reason.
The fourth industrial revolution comes with many new digitalisation and automation opportunities many companies are already making use of. And with good reason.
Why maintenance management is of major importance
Maintenance management has increased in significance
Especially in a world of increasingly complex production processes the topic “Maintenance 4.0” is gaining in significance.
Maintenance in the past and present
- Maintenance 1.0, until approx. 1960: reactive maintenance; repair following a system failure; also referred to as “breakdown maintenance”.
- Maintenance 2.0, until approx. 1980: preventive, time-dependent maintenance. The focus shifted towards availability, service life and lower costs.
- Maintenance 3.0, until approx. 2015: condition-oriented maintenance by manual measures. Added to the aspects of Maintenance 2.0 were points such as consistent and/or higher product quality, increased plant and environmental safety as well as a higher profitability.
- Maintenance 4.0, from approx. 2015: condition-oriented maintenance by permanent digital monitoring, condition monitoring, etc.
Smart sensors and digital twins
- Gaining a deeper process understanding through transparency in the system
- Enhancing profitability by reducing planned and preventing unscheduled downtimes
- Consolidating and planning maintenance based on permanent analysis of data recorded (predictive maintenance)
- Increasing the efficiency of machinery as potential for improvement is identified
Digital data allows the maintenance team to keep an eye on their system at all times, so they know if and when failures might occur.
Maintenance 4.0 at the example of pump monitoring
In the Kalle-Albert industrial park in Wiesbaden KSB Guard detected high vibrations at one of the pumps. Technicians initiated a repair during periods when pump operation was not essential, preventing a sudden system failure with unplanned downtimes and far-reaching resultant losses.