Why Preventive Maintenance Still Begins With Six Simple Tasks

by | Articles, Maintenance and Reliability

Preventive Maintenance (PM), as a process, has been around as long as the wheel. When something — an asset — is excited by motion, heat, or mechanical stimulation, something begins the process of performance deterioration. Using whatever knowledge was available to them, people in every era developed tactics to slow, or in some cases eliminate, that deterioration.

Those tactics, then and now, reduce to six fundamental tasks:

Inspect Detect asset functional performance degradation before failure
Lubricate Control friction and wear through proper lubrication regimes
Clean Remove contamination that accelerates mechanical wear
Adjust Restore alignment and correct load distribution
Tighten / Secure Maintain structural integrity and prevent vibration-induced loosening
Replace Remove components approaching end-of-life before catastrophic failure

 

These tasks remain the core of any PM process. Technologies have changed, and processes have been adjusted accordingly. Vibration analysis, thermography, and other condition monitoring methods have transformed how we execute ‘inspect.’ But the task itself — detecting degradation before failure — is unchanged.

Another important subset of PM, Basic Care performed by operators and mechanics, remains relevant precisely because of those practitioners’ accumulated experience with specific assets in specific process environments. That experience is the subject of this paper.

The Problem with PM in Practice

The greatest threat to PM comes not from the process or from the technologies, but from abusive cultures.

Every site I have visited insists they have a functioning PM program — and they are ready to show you their list of PM Work Orders and a schedule. But upon examining the actual task content, it soon becomes apparent that many programs are nothing more than impossible wish lists of tasks never to be accomplished on any realistic schedule. A maintenance strategy built by accumulation of Work Requests rather than by engineering intent.

From a purely mechanical reliability perspective — rotating equipment, drives, structural elements, piping — nearly every preventive maintenance activity reduces to the six fundamental task types described above. These tasks are independent of software systems, compliance programs, or management philosophy. They are physical actions that directly influence machine integrity.

The Six Fundamental PM Tasks

What follows is a failure-physics-driven analysis of each task type: what it controls, why it matters, and what happens mechanically when it is neglected.

Inspect — Detect Asset Functional Performance Degradation

Purpose: Identify mechanical deterioration before failure occurs.

Inspection is about detecting loss of mechanical integrity early in the P–F interval[1] — the window between when a potential failure first becomes detectable and when functional failure actually occurs. It is a task designed to prevent unscheduled, unplanned asset failure.

Primary failure modes controlled:

  • Fatigue cracking and bearing spalling
  • Imbalance and misalignment vibration
  • Weld cracking and structural damage
  • Early seal leakage

Inspection includes verifying:

  • Presence — Are all bolts, guards, retaining rings, shims, and locking devices present?
  • Condition — Are bolts stretched? Are threads damaged? Are fasteners backing out?
  • Integrity — Is preload maintained? Is there evidence of fretting at joint interfaces?

Missing hardware is not a minor issue. It is often the trigger event that initiates several serious failure modes. A missing coupling bolt creates mass imbalance, which increases radial bearing load and accelerates fatigue. A missing foundation bolt redistributes load to adjacent bolts, initiating fretting and crack propagation. Inspection does not prevent failure — it intercepts it during the P–F interval, when planned intervention is still possible.

Lubricate — Control Friction and Wear

Purpose: Maintain proper lubrication regime throughout the asset’s operating life.

Lubrication failures account for a significant portion of rotating equipment damage. Without sufficient lubrication film, metal-to-metal contact leads to micro-welding, tearing, debris generation, and accelerated wear. Proper lubrication maintains the hydrodynamic or elastohydrodynamic film that separates surfaces, removes heat, flushes particles, and reduces the coefficient of friction.

Primary failure modes controlled:

  • Adhesive wear (galling, scoring)
  • Abrasive wear from contaminated lubricant
  • Surface fatigue and fretting corrosion
  • Overheating due to boundary lubrication breakdown

Lubrication requires discipline in four areas:

  • Correct lubricant type and quantity for the application
  • Cleanliness of the lubricant and delivery system
  • Correct interval — neither over-greasing nor under-greasing
  • Delivery method integrity — fittings present, accessible, and functioning

I have personally overseen a collection of assets that were expected to be replaced within their design life cycle but that continue to perform today, well beyond that cycle. This extension did not happen by accident. It was the result of a planned, scheduled, and consistently executed lubrication program.

Clean — Remove Contamination

Purpose: Eliminate abrasive and thermal stress contributors that accelerate mechanical degradation.

Contamination is one of the primary accelerants of mechanical wear. Particles that enter lubricants or contact surfaces become cutting tools. Dust in bearings functions like sandpaper in motion. Blocked cooling paths cause temperature to rise, which reduces lubricant viscosity, which causes lubrication film collapse, which accelerates wear — a self-reinforcing failure cascade.

Primary failure modes controlled:

  • Three-body abrasive wear
  • Corrosion from moisture accumulation
  • Overheating from blocked cooling paths
  • Seal damage and erosion

Having operators clean motor cooling fan grills as part of a basic care program is a PM task. Having mechanics clear debris from chains and strainers is a PM task. Contamination control is often the root cause amplifier of other failure modes — address it, and multiple other degradation pathways slow simultaneously.

Adjust — Restore Alignment and Load Conditions

Purpose: Maintain proper mechanical relationships between components.

Mechanical failures often originate from improper alignment or load distribution. Even small misalignment dramatically increases radial bearing load and accelerates fatigue. Improper belt tension — too tight and it overloads bearings; too loose and it slips, generates heat, and glazes the belt surface. The geometry of the load path matters.

Primary failure modes controlled:

  • Misalignment-induced bearing failure
  • Coupling fatigue from angular or parallel misalignment
  • Belt edge wear and glazing
  • Chain elongation and sprocket wear
  • Gear tooth uneven loading

We have known this since the first ox cart had its wheel fitted to its axle. Nothing has changed in principle. What has changed is the precision with which we can measure and correct these conditions.

Tighten / Secure — Maintain Structural Integrity

Purpose: Prevent vibration-induced loosening and the structural degradation that follows.

This task category is often underemphasized, but it is critical in high-vibration environments. Loss of clamp load leads to micro-movement at interfaces, which produces fretting, which generates oxidation debris, which initiates crack propagation. Loose foundation bolts allow dynamic amplification of cyclic stress, accelerating fatigue crack growth.

Primary failure modes controlled:

  • Fretting corrosion at joint interfaces
  • Bolt fatigue from cyclic loading
  • Foundation cracking and anchor bolt failure
  • Vibration amplification from reduced structural stiffness
  • Loosened couplings and rotating element displacement

Early in my career, I was shown a PM task on a paper machine: ‘Tighten Frame Bolts on Dryer Section.’ I asked my mentor what it was about, and he told me to watch at startup. Standing on the drive side, I could see the frames swaying slightly along their length — visible motion. ‘If we didn’t do this every scheduled down, we’d lose the frames, bearings, and gears,’ he said. No engineering solution had been found for eliminating the sway. So periodic tightening was the PM. It was not elegant. It was effective.

Replace — Address Wear-Out and Material Degradation

Purpose: Remove components approaching end-of-life before catastrophic fracture or failure.

Some components follow a predictable wear-out curve. Replacement is appropriate when a wear-out pattern is established through condition monitoring or service history, and when the consequence of failure is unacceptable. Replacement interrupts the failure curve before the consequences become unplanned and costly.

Primary failure modes controlled:

  • Wear-out fatigue in bearings approaching L10 life
  • Seal face erosion and loss of face flatness
  • Creep in high-temperature service components
  • Material embrittlement and elastomer degradation
  • Chain elongation beyond tolerance

Task-to-Failure-Physics Summary

Every mechanical PM task, at its core, controls one or more of these physical variables: excess stress, excess friction, excess contamination, loss of preload, or material aging.

PM Task Failure Physics Controlled
Inspect Fatigue, crack propagation, imbalance detection
Lubricate Adhesive wear, abrasive wear, surface fatigue
Clean Contamination-induced wear, corrosion, overheating
Adjust Misalignment, uneven loading, overload fatigue
Tighten / Secure Fretting, bolt fatigue, structural cracking
Replace Wear-out fatigue, material aging, seal degradation

 

The Operator Driven Reliability (ODR) Checklist

Basic Care by operators and mechanics is the practical expression of the six PM tasks. In a high-energy, high-vibration environment like a paper mill, the operator is often the earliest and most available sensor in the reliability system.

For an ODR program to be effective, the checklist must be simple, observable, repeatable, failure-mode focused, and non-invasive. It should take less than three minutes per asset, use Yes/No criteria, and feed directly into the maintenance work order system.

Area Check For Why It Matters
Fasteners & Structure

Missing bolts, nuts, washers

Backed-off nuts (visible thread growth)

Rust trails around bolts

Cracks in baseplates or welds

Loose or vibrating guards

Loss of clamp load → joint movement → fretting → fatigue crack initiation. If one bolt is missing, load has already redistributed.
Lubrication

Grease purging excessively or not at all

Oil level outside sight glass range

Milky or dark oil

Damaged or missing grease fittings

Leaking seals

Lubrication failure → adhesive wear → bearing overheating → spalling. Contaminated oil is an abrasive wear accelerator.
Alignment & Drives

Coupling insert deterioration

Belt edge wear or glazing

Uneven belt tension

Chain sag outside tolerance

Sprocket or sheave wobble

Misalignment → uneven loading → bearing fatigue → reduced L10 life. Belt edge wear is often the first visible misalignment indicator.
Vibration & Noise

New or increasing vibration

Rattling guards

Unusual knocking or grinding

Pipe or conduit movement

Changes in sound tone

Vibration = cyclic stress. Cyclic stress = fatigue crack propagation. Operators are often first to detect acoustic changes.
Temperature

Bearing housing hotter than normal

Gearbox temperature rise

Hot spots at couplings

Smell of burnt oil

Heat reduces lubricant viscosity → film collapse → wear acceleration. Temperature rise is often the earliest measurable degradation sign.
Cleanliness

Dust buildup on cooling fins

Plugged breathers

Oil accumulation on base

Water near bearings

Debris around rotating equipment

Contamination → abrasive wear. Blocked cooling → thermal stress. Standing oil → leak progression.

 

Operator Escalation Criteria

Operators should escalate — not necessarily shut down, but always report — when any of the following conditions are observed:

  • A bolt or fastener is missing
  • Temperature is noticeably higher than the posted normal range
  • Vibration is visibly increased or a new sound is present
  • Oil is milky (water contamination) or contains metallic particles
  • A crack is visible in a structural element
  • A guard is unsecured

Design Principles for ODR Checklists

1. No tools beyond flashlight, rag, and IR gun (if authorized)

2. Takes less than 3 minutes per asset

3. Uses simple Yes/No criteria

4. Linked to specific failure physics — not generic inspections

5. Feeds directly into the maintenance work order system

6. Posted at equipment or embedded in route device

 

Creating a Reliability-Centered Organization (RCO)

Moving from task execution to organizational design: ODR and Basic Care are most powerful not as standalone programs but as the frontline detection layer within a Reliability-Centered Organization (RCO) — a structure in which reliability is a business control variable, not a maintenance activity.

The Core RCO Principle

In a Reliability-Centered Organization:

  • Reliability is not owned by maintenance.

  • Operators control operating stress.

  • Maintenance controls mechanical integrity.

  • Engineering controls failure elimination.

  • Leadership controls system discipline.

 

The Reliability Control Stack

Think of RCO as a layered protection model, where each layer provides a different type of defense against mechanical failure:

Layer Function
Layer 1 — Design Integrity Engineering controls failure at the source through design
Layer 2 — Precision Maintenance Correct installation and precision practices
Layer 3 — ODR / Basic Care Human early-warning sensor network (this paper’s focus)
Layer 4 — Condition Monitoring (PdM) Technology-based detection of degradation signatures
Layer 5 — Corrective & Root Cause Elimination Fixing problems and eliminating recurrence
Layer 6 — Capital Renewal Strategy Asset lifecycle management and replacement planning

 

ODR and Basic Care Mechanical Inspection sits between precision maintenance and predictive analytics. It is the human early-warning sensor network that no technology fully replaces — because operators and mechanics know what ‘normal’ sounds, feels, and smells like for their specific machines.

Closed-Loop Reliability Feedback

Without a closed feedback loop, ODR becomes a checklist exercise. With it, it becomes a strategic reliability sensor. The loop works as follows:

Step Action
ODR Inspection Operator detects abnormal condition during route
Defect Identification Condition is documented and classified by failure mode
Maintenance Correction Work order issued and executed within defined SLA
Failure Mode Classification Defect type recorded in CMMS for trending
Engineering Review Patterns analyzed; PM standards adjusted accordingly
Standard Update Updated criteria communicated to operators
Improved Inspection Criteria Route refined based on observed failure patterns

 

If operators report missing bolts and nothing happens, the system collapses. ODR only works if defect response is disciplined. The loop must close.

Organizational Accountability

Role Mechanical Integrity Responsibility
Operator Detect abnormal conditions during routine ODR routes
Maintenance Restore mechanical integrity within defined response time
Reliability Engineer Analyze defect trends and eliminate root causes
Production Manager Protect operating envelope; avoid overload conditions
Mill Manager Enforce reliability discipline; tie metrics to business outcomes

 

What Makes RCO Integration Fail

  • ODR findings are ignored or not acted upon

  • Maintenance response is slow or undisciplined

  • Engineering does not analyze defect trends

  • Leadership tolerates repeat failures without investigation

  • Metrics focus only on cost, not on mechanical integrity

 

Financial Impact Model

The following model illustrates the financial impact of integrating Mechanical Integrity ODR/Basic Care into a Reliability-Centered Organization at a five-machine fully integrated paper mill.[2]

6.1 Baseline Assumptions — Year 0 (Before RCO/ODR)

Parameter Assumption
Annual Production Capacity 1,000,000 tons
Average Contribution Margin $120 / ton
Annual Revenue $800 million
Current Availability 92%
Maintenance Spend $65 million / year
Emergency Work Ratio 30%
Asset Replacement Value (ARV) $1.2 billion
EBITDA (contribution basis) $110.4 million
Return on Assets (ROA) 9.2%

 

What Mechanical Integrity ODR Actually Changes

From experience in heavy rotating environments, structured mechanical ODR typically drives the following conservative, achievable shifts:

  • +1.0% to +2.0% availability improvement over three years
  • 15–20% reduction in emergency work ratio
  • 5–7% reduction in secondary damage costs from early defect detection
  • 10% reduction in repeat mechanical failures through engineering feedback loop

Annual Financial Impact — Conservative Case

Source of Improvement Annual EBITDA Impact
Availability +1% (10,000 additional tons × $120) $1.2 million
Emergency Work Reduction (15% of $19.5M, 60% realized) $1.7 million
Secondary Damage Reduction (5% of $40M corrective spend, 50% realized) $1.0 million
Total Annual Impact $3.9–4.0 million

 

Three-Year Phased Financial Projection

RCO transformation does not deliver full value immediately. Year 1 is culture-building. Year 2 shows measurable traction. Year 3 reflects structural reliability maturity.

Metric Year 1 (Foundation) Year 2 (Optimization) Year 3 (Maturity)
Availability Gain +0.5% +1.2% +2.0%
Emergency Work Reduction 5% 12% 20%
Secondary Damage Reduction 2% 4% 7%
Program Cost $1.0M $0.8M $0.8M
Net EBITDA Improvement $0.6M $2.8M $5.3M
Cumulative Net Gain $0.6M $3.4M $8.7M
EBITDA (total) $111.0M $113.8M $115.7M
ROA 9.25% 9.48% 9.64%

 

Enterprise Value Implication

If corporate valuation multiple = 6× EBITDA:

Year 3 incremental EBITDA: $5.3 million

Enterprise value increase: approximately $31.8 million

On essentially no capital expansion.

Implementation cost is modest: $500K–$800K annually for training, route updates, mobile checklist integration, and reliability engineering time.

Net ROI on program investment: greater than 400%.

 

Why This Model Is Mechanically Credible

This model is not based on software, analytics platforms, or capital investment. It is based on physics-driven failure control:

  • Earlier crack detection through structured inspection
  • Preserved bolt preload through regular tightening routes
  • Reduced misalignment through discipline in adjustment tasks
  • Better lubrication state through operator-level monitoring
  • Reduced contamination through basic care cleaning tasks
  • Fewer fatigue-driven catastrophic failures as a result of all of the above

The downside risk is low because ODR costs are small relative to the asset base, and improvements compound over time as failure patterns are identified and eliminated.

Conclusion

There is much said today about capturing the knowledge and experience of those nearing retirement, so that accumulated wisdom is not lost. This paper is one attempt to convey the experience of decades working with Preventive Maintenance and Basic Care, including Operator-Driven Reliability.

The process of preventive maintenance is not new. It has developed over centuries of working with mechanical assets, and it has undergone untold modifications, revisions, and upgrades — some positive, many negative — over that time. Advances in technology have driven much of the improvement. But the six basic process steps have remained unchanged in principle.

The cultural shift required for RCO is significant. In a traditional maintenance culture, maintenance ‘fixes things’ and operators ‘run things.’ In a Reliability-Centered Organization, operators protect mechanical integrity, maintenance restores precision, engineering eliminates recurrence, and leadership enforces standards. Mechanical ODR is the visible expression of that shift.

Strategic Conclusion

Over three years, Mechanical Integrity ODR inside a Reliability-Centered Organization:

  • Improves EBITDA by 4–5%

  • Raises ROA by approximately 0.4%

  • Increases enterprise value by approximately $30 million

  • Lowers safety exposure through structural integrity control

  • Reduces production volatility

And does so without major capital expenditure.

For a five-machine mill, $4–6 million per year in improvement is realistic and defensible.

 

I stand by my commitment — decades long — to use technologies, bleeding edge, leading edge, and proven, to achieve efficiency and effectiveness in asset care. AI tools help assemble and structure these thoughts more quickly than I could alone.[3] But the knowledge, the experience, and the judgment are human.

Think about it.

Notes

[1] The P–F curve describes the interval between when a potential failure (P) becomes detectable and when functional failure (F) occurs. The goal of PM is to detect degradation early in this interval, allowing planned intervention rather than reactive repair.

[2]Financial figures are illustrative and based on representative industry benchmarks. Actual results will vary by mill configuration, product mix, market conditions, and program execution quality.

[3] Author disclosure: AI tools are used to supplement and structure content — consistent with the core principle of this paper: applying technology to improve process efficiency.

Author

  • John Yolton

    John Yolton has a 60+ year career in maintenance and asset management, nearly half as a practitioner in the P&P industry across multiple sites, the remainder as a strategy consultant for several OEMs to varied industries. John retired from his most recent position of Strategic Programs Manager for SKF in 2019 and has since performed consulting assignments and written articles pertaining to his knowledge and experience with asset performance improvement. Contact via LinkedIn message.

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