The importance of maintaining aging equipment

Maintaining aging equipment can be a challenge as parts for the old equipment are often no longer available or very expensive, particularly if systems end up failing.

By Kelvin P. Severin June 8, 2022
Courtesy: CFE Media and Technology

Learning Objectives

  • Many processing facilities in the United States have never been upgraded even though they’ve been operating for decades in some cases.
  • Creating a checklist allows companies to make informed decisions and prioritize potential upgrades to aging equipment.
  • Every facility should review its equipment to verify its life expectancy and ensure it is safe for continued operation.

Time is constantly working against operating equipment in a plant. Over time, components of the equipment reach the end of their useful lifespan and need to be replaced. Manufacturers go out of business or are no longer producing parts for antiquated equipment. The technology advances, and new and improved standardized models are developed, causing components to become outdated or obsolete. Many processing facilities in the United States were built decades ago and have never been upgraded.  

Maintaining aging equipment can be a challenge as parts for the old equipment are often no longer available or very expensive. For example, the manufacturer may no longer exist, or they may no longer produce the parts, or the components do not meet the newest revision of a regulatory standard.  

Steps for managing aging equipment 

If aging equipment is not managed properly in relation to its expected lifespan, it can result in avoidable safety incidents, or maintenance and reliability issues. Most equipment has a specified life expectancy and pushing it beyond its useful life can put an operating facility at risk. Some older systems and instrumentation do not have the technology for diagnostics and therefore have no ability to query or troubleshoot the operating issue, resulting in extended shutdowns. Companies also may face a loss of production and revenue in the event of mechanical issues with a piece of antiquated operating equipment, systems or instrumentation that causes the process to go offline.  

A cost-effective first step to address aging equipment is a conceptual level screening checklist, which evaluates equipment systematically to identify deficiencies in the components. Facilities may be unaware of serious issues, and this checklist allows companies to make informed decisions and prioritize potential upgrades to aging equipment.  

This applies to long-standing operating facilities as well as companies who recently purchased an existing facility, as they may not recognize the condition of all assets and/or older equipment they acquired.  

After identifying areas of improvement, a plan can be developed for replacing the obsolete components approaching the end of their useful life. This plan should assess the safety concerns, mechanical concerns, and operational risks to the facility. It should also include a timeline for how soon the antiquated components should be replaced. The best replacement option is provided with qualities such as reliability and resilience to assure a long lifespan, aligning with regulatory codes, and adaptability to future system upgrades installed at the facility. 

Every facility should review its equipment to verify its life expectancy and ensure it is safe and reliable for continued operation. Consider a situation where a facility is unable to find replacement parts or utilizes replacement parts sourced outside of the normal supply chain from the manufacturer to adapt to the existing system.  

This short-term solution could potentially perpetuate mechanical and reliability issues. A conceptual level screening checklist can assess the status of aging equipment components, and proactive replacement measures can be taken to create a system of longevity and resilience going forward.  

Kelvin P. Severin, P.E., senior project engineer, fired equipment, aeSolutions. Edited by Chris Vavra, web content manager, Control Engineering, CFE Media and Technology, cvavra@cfemedia.com 

MORE INSIGHTS 

Keywords: obsolescence, maintenance 

CONSIDER THIS 

How does your company deal with aging manufacturing equipment? 


Author Bio: Kelvin P. Severin, P.E., senior project engineer, fired equipment, aeSolutions