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PM and Inventory Procedures Vital to CMMS

The system you choose should have a routine
for developing and scheduling PM tasks.
Then you have to implement the CMMS.
One very important aspect of a computerized maintenance management system
(CMMS) is its ability to handle preventive maintenance (PM) procedures. This
critical component, as well as the scheduling and planning functions discussed
in a previous article (MT 12/97, pg 14), are key checkpoints for the selection
of a CMMS. Here are some guidelines for evaluating PM procedures and for
implementing a CMMS.
PM schedules must be established before plant management can determine the
overall workload of the maintenance staff. A survey of plant equipment allows
personnel to determine the frequency and schedule dates for PMs and to compile
complete PM data records, as shown in the sections "PM Establishment and
Flow Procedure" and "PM Data Worksheet."
The CMMS under evaluation should have tools in place to develop, maintain, and
schedule this preventive maintenance. These questions should be asked in the
CMMS selection process:
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Does it have a separate module for maintaining and
scheduling PM work orders? |
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Are forms developed for establishing PM tasks and entering the
information into the CMMS? |
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Does the PM module have the ability to link specific job plans for
performing these PM activities? |
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Many PM tasks are not equipment specific. Does the CMMS have PM route
capabilities where you can schedule multiple equipment PM tasks such as
lubrication and greasing routes? |
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Does it have a PM activate routine that allows review of PM tasks due
and creates PM work orders with associated job plans? |
Preventive maintenance is an ongoing program that must be audited
continuously for continuity and validity. Among the reports that should be
available in the CMMS to review and adjust the PM program are estimated PM
man-hours by craft between dates, PMs by frequency and area, PMs by craft, and
PMs by equipment.
Inventory systems
The plant's maintenance storeroom is set up to provide maintenance personnel the
parts and materials required to keep the plant's facilities and production
machinery running efficiently.
Proper management and control of maintenance storeroom parts and materials will
ensure that (1) the parts are there when needed, (2) redundant items are not
being purchased, (3) items will be automatically re-ordered as needed, (4)
obsolete items are reported upon for deletion, (5) cost-effective methods are
being used for purchasing lot type items, (6) item usage costs are being
documented and reported to management, and (7) parts and materials costs are
being allocated against equipment and accounts as used.
Important inventory management questions to ask about the CMMS you are
considering include:
1. Is a form developed for compiling inventory information and is this form
compatible with the CMMS data entry inventory screens?
2. What tools are available for establishing and maintaining maintenance
inventory?
3. Does the CMMS allow review and adjustment of inventory before automatic
reorder?
4. Does it contain inventory search and sorting capabilities by part or material
categories?
5. How does the CMMS handle inventory stock item types such as nonstocked,
vendor stock, maintenance stock, etc.?
6. Does it offer stocking classification codes such as general supplies, safety,
insurance, obsolete, etc.?
7. Does it offer ABC inventory value by usage capabilities?
8. Can spare parts be committed to work orders?
9. Can spare parts be looked up via the equipment record screen and are the
number of spare parts required per piece of equipment maintained in this record?
10. What procedures are in place for issuing and posting inventory items against
work orders or accounts? Are parts issued against a work order so material costs
are tracked back to a job and subsequently to an equipment number? Can parts be
returned and credited against a work order number?
11. What reports are available for maintaining and controlling inventory costs?
Among them should be:
- Equipment spare parts cross referenced tto an inventory catalog that also
references warehouse and stock bin location
- Inventory value report, sorted with grouup totals by stock classification code
(general supplies, PPE, maintenance stock, insurance, obsolete, etc.)
- Nonequipment usage report, sorted by stoock type and usage in descending order
- Equipment usage report, sorted by usage in descending order
- Stock-out report, sorted by inventory ittem number with highest to lowest
stock-out occurrences
- Slow moving inventory by value report, ssorted by value in descending order
- Surplus/obsolete inventory report, sorteed by vendor and value in descending
order
- Usage by location reports, sorted by stoockroom and bin location.
With the major CMMS components evaluated, the next step is developing an
implementation plan. This involves both personnel and hardware/software
considerations.
Staffing for implementation
Choosing an implementation staff will depend on the size and scope of your
organization. Among things to consider will be:
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Who will input information into the CMMS? If it is to be
built through manual data entry, you should consider a data entry clerk
and develop forms for input. If file data transfer from an existing
software program is feasible, you must decide who will develop the
translation and transfer formats. |
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Who will survey and obtain equipment specifications, PM requirements,
and spare parts information? |
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Who will survey your on-site maintenance inventory? |
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Who will develop and manage PM requirements? |
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Who will manage and coordinate planning and scheduling functions? This
includes maintenance as well as production personnel. |
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Who will maintain the inventory system? |
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Who will maintain the CMMS network, including data backups? |
Hardware and software considerations include whether the CMMS will be
networked and what the plat- form will be, the number of workstations necessary,
and the hardware requirements.
Implementing the system
Once you have determined which CMMS best fits your needs, you should decide how
you will implement the system. Consider the following guidelines:
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Software training. No matter what system you purchase,
your personnel should be well schooled on their level of use in the
system. |
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Account codes and system tables. Account codes are usually the first
thing required to be entered into the CMMS. Once the codes are
established, system tables should be established. |
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Tables. These are used throughout most systems to provide look-ups for
quick data entry, to validate choices, and to provide searching and
sorting options. Some of these tables can be built as you enter data for
that particular module, but all tables should be reviewed and built. |
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Equipment records. Before any work orders or PM records can be built
you will have to establish your equipment records. |
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Preventive maintenance records. Before you can determine your
maintenance workload, PM requirements have to be identified. At a
minimum, daily, weekly, and monthly PM records should be established
prior to implementing work order planning and scheduling. |
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Work order planning and scheduling. Once your equipment and PM records
are established, you should be able to implement the work order system.
At this time, you should review staffing requirements and work order
planning and scheduling flow procedures. |
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Inventory records. It is not absolutely necessary to establish
inventory records before implementing the work order system. However,
most systems allow you to cross reference spare parts to equipment and
allocate them to work orders. Therefore, inventory records should be
established in a timely manner. |
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