Best Reasons To Use RCM - Optimizing Lean Manufacturing: Carlo Odoardi, Meng
Best Reasons To Use RCM - Optimizing Lean Manufacturing: Carlo Odoardi, Meng
Best Reasons To Use RCM - Optimizing Lean Manufacturing: Carlo Odoardi, Meng
The objective of this post is to explain why RCM is a complementary - not a competitive
– service offering that Operational Efficiency managers will benefit from. In fact, using
RCM is arguably the best tool to achieve optimal cost-effectiveness in asset-intensive
businesses[1]. Besides the tremendous cost-savings benefits RCM offers, it also
inherently focuses on reducing or eliminating the consequences of two other important
aspects worth considering in any Lean program – Safety and the Environment.
As we know, Lean Manufacturing and, of late, Lean Maintenance target the identification
and elimination of waste through continuous improvement. The problem of under-
maintaining physical assets is often addressed through loss elimination and continuous
improvement programs. The problem of over-maintaining by comparison receives little
attention. Left unattended, the over-maintaining of physical assets silently and
continuously squanders precious maintenance resources (time, tools, parts and labor),
reduces production availability and can actually cause failure to occur – sometimes
catastrophically! – because we intervene when we should not. These problems of under
and over maintaining plant equipment can be resolved through the proper use of RCM
which optimizes PM programs.
A good definition for Lean Manufacturing is "A systematic approach to identifying and
eliminating waste in business processes through continuous improvement”. Waste can
be further defined as “Anything that adds no value to the manufacturing process”.
Lean Maintenance is all about eliminating waste from the maintenance process. Some
estimates are between 18% and 30% of every dollar spent on maintenance is wasted[2].
Others have reported that maintenance operations may be wasting up to 25 percent of
available labor and that up to 60 percent of this waste result from activities that add no
value to the performance of the plant[3].
Applying the categories of waste identified for Lean Manufacturing to Lean Maintenance,
results in the following common sources of waste in manufacturing maintenance that
RCM can help eliminate:
1. Overproduction –
2. Inventory –
3. Waiting -
Lean Manufacturing: Delays in the production process. RCM functions define what
performance standard minimum and maximum delay times are tolerable in
production cycles.
Lean Maintenance: Waiting for tools, parts, documentation, transportation,
etc. RCM requires that all necessary tools, parts, documentation are all pre-
planned BEFORE the asset is operated.
4. Transportation –
5. Motion –
6. Processing–
7. Defects –
What is RCM?
“RCM is a process used to determine what must be done to ensure that any physical asset
continues to do what its users want it to do in its present operation context.”[4] The goal
of RCM is to avoid or reduce the CONSEQUENCES of equipment failure - not necessarily
to avoid the equipment failures. If we correctly apply RCM to identify the most suitable
and effective maintenance tasks to ensure the performance of a system or component,
it will lead to optimal Operational Efficiency/Effectiveness from the perspective of Safety,
Environmental and Economic consequences. In other words, a truly LEAN organization!
In the 1960's, the Civil Aviation industry introduced wide body aircraft such as the 747,
DC-10, and the L-1011. Operating these new aircraft with traditional maintenance
methods led the airline carriers to the conclusion that the maintenance philosophies
being used were inappropriate and unsustainable – many times with deadly
consequences. Early maintenance programs were based on the premise that everything
had a life. They believed that periodic overhauls were essential to sustain performance
and reliability. The FAA and the commercial aviation industry formed a group named the
MSG led by Stanley Nowlan and Howard Heap to study the preventive maintenance
approach used at the time. The conclusion was that, in many cases, fixed-interval
overhauls had little or no effect on overall reliability and safety. Actually, in most cases it
caused more failures than it prevented – “If it isn’t broken, don’t fix it!”
Since then, RCM has been used very successfully and extensively around the world.
However, the term ‘RCM’ has been unfairly associated with a number of processes that
differ significantly from the original and fail to achieve the goals of Nowlan and
Heap. Some are counterproductive and downright dangerous. Fortunately, before John
Moubray’s untimely death in 2004, he was able to establish the SAE Standard
JA1011/1012. This responded to the growing international demand for a standard that
sets out the criteria that any process must comply with in order to be called ‘RCM’.
Briefly, the RCM process involves the following:
Most companies perform 'Cost Cutting Maintenance' by looking at the direct cost
and reducing it without considering the impact on safety or production. RCM's
focus is to ensure the maintenance budget is spent in the right place/area where
it will do the most benefit and have the greatest impact. In other words, to reduce
the Unit Cost of Maintenance!
Defines what critical spares, tools & labor are required for planning & scheduling
throughout the assets’ life-cycle
These results are only achievable if the RCM analysis is conducted by a competent RCM
facilitator. Without asset reliability, your efforts to achieve lean, cut costs, improve on
safety and environmental performance will be compromised.
FINAL NOTE
In his book on Lean Maintenance, one of the most sought after experts in the
Maintenance and Reliability field, Joel Levitt, has this to say about RCM:
“…RCM is the most rigorous method we have to analyze a maintenance event and come up
with definitive answers about tasking, frequency, and redesign.”
“…RCM offers Lean Maintenance efforts a level of rigor not available in other programs. It
also offers mental models of maintenance beyond anything else. We can learn a great deal
from a systematic study of RCM. Keep in mind, RCM is one of the most powerful ways to
improve maintenance because it addresses the core of the customer need, that is, an
increasingly reliable system. The technology is an outgrowth of deep investigations into
reliability that were performed on behalf of aircraft manufacturers and airlines.[5]”
Email: [email protected]
References:
[1] Ricky Smith, Bruce Hawkins, “Lean Maintenance – Reduce Costs, Improve Quality and
Increase Market Share”, ©2004, Elsevier Butterworth-Heinemann, Burlington, MA USA
[2] K. Bever, “Enterprise Systems Integration: Opportunities & Obstacles Developing Plant
Asset Management Systems”, March 13, 2000 (Presented at National Manufacturing
Week, Chicago, Illinois)
[3] Terrence O'Hanlon, “Reliability Goes Nonfat With Lean Maintenance”, February 2002,
ReliabilityWeb.com, http://www.mt-online.com/current/0202_leanmaint.html
[5] Joel Levitt, “Lean Maintenance”, © 2008, Industrial Press Inc., New York, USA