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Intelligent monitoring moves field service teams into proactive maintenance

ASSET management is an ongoing concern for global industry, particularly at a time when most organisations are working towards establishing operations and profits to (at the very least) pre-pandemic standards.

Unplanned downtime is one of the foremost reasons for productivity loss in manufacturing, resulting in output delays and seriously unsatisfied customers. In fact, according to Deloitte’s Predictive maintenance and the smart factory report, it’s estimated that unplanned downtime costs industrial manufacturing companies an estimated US$50 billion each year.

Maintenance plays a fundamental role in reducing unplanned outages which makes a compelling case for partnering with organisations that offer field services teams and a robust support infrastructure, fed by experts across the world, to speed up problem-solving and reduce potential losses.

“An important differentiator of any field services offering is the ability to offer end-to-end monitoring, maintenance, and repair.  In the case of Schneider Electric’s Secure Power offerings, the company’s field services teams focus on the entire ecosystem of products that include UPSs, power distribution, security and environmental monitoring, cooling and software,” comments secure power expert consultant at Schneider Electric, Reinard van Antwerpen (pictured).

“Organisations can rest assured when our teams provide support, we can offer services that are based on the wealth of experience by our global teams and advanced cloud-based tools that accelerate problem-solving, benefiting both operations and business,” he adds.

Maintenance and support have certainly come a long way.  In the past, fault or downtime would be reported as it materialised, and engineers would only then be dispatched to repair it.  “Unfortunately, often the damage is already done, and crisis mode ensues which is highly unsettling to organisations and support teams, leading to human error and diminished asset lifecycles,” comments Van Antwerpen.

Today’s predictive and prescriptive service maintenance uses Internet of Things (IoT) sensors to constantly report back on the condition and performance of assets – right down to the level of individual components – service can be provided based on the actual health of the equipment, rather than a fixed schedule.

Explains Van Antwerpen: “With this level of field service provision, we are constantly analysing data in parallel with AI software and our team of experts.  For example, if a component shows early signs of failure, an engineer can be immediately dispatched to repair or replace it – before a shutdown even occurs.

“An engineer can also arrive on site armed with all the information and parts he or she requires to complete the job – significantly increasing the rate of first-time fixes and improving customer satisfaction.”

Schneider Electric’s EcoStruxure Augmented Operator Advisor technology ensures support teams have access to digital field service manuals, schematics, and blueprints.
The custom application improves operational efficiency thanks to Augmented Reality, enabling operators to superimpose data and virtual objects onto a cabinet, a machine, or a plant.

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