Course Description:
Equipment is usually well designed and properly installed. However, the principal reason for system breakdown is the failure to maintain the installation in its designed state.
Instituting a preventive maintenance program which consists of routine inspections, tests and service of equipment can significantly reduce the potential for breakdown. Without a preventive maintenance program, your facility assumes a risk of serious failure and the heightened potential consequences of production interruption. The course has been designed to provide the participants with not only the “what’s” of the work practices but also the “whys”.
Course Goal:
To enhance the participant’s knowledge, skills, and abilities necessary to understand and apply recent techniques of preventive maintenance
Course Objectives:
By the end of the course, participant will be able to:
- Identify the function and operation of the equipments.
- Identify components of a successful preventive maintenance program.
- Determine the personal protective equipment (PPE) requirements for troubleshooting.
- Safely and correctly verify a circuit is de-energized.
- Distinguish between the different types of maintenance.
- Perform proper maintenance on substations Equipment.
- Observe power quality problems and troubleshooting techniques for facility distribution systems and three-phase loads.
- Be ready to read and interpret diagrams.
Course Outline:
- Fundamentals of Maintenance.
- Terms and Definitions.
- Equipment Performance, Planning and Scheduling.
- Guide Line for Implementation.
- Cost saving Programs.
- Maintenance Goals.
- Measuring Maintenance Performance.
- Manager Keys.
- Rotating Equipment Maintenance.
- Annual Maintenance Plans.
Who Can Benefit?
Maintenance engineers, others who must deal with maintenance in a different places and working with operation systems in any oil and gas and manufacturing petroleum systems.