Keeping the water and cost savings flowing for Hamilton City

Maintenance Matters

Hamilton City Council has achieved a 50 percent reduction in machine faults as well as annual savings of $30,000 in machine overhauls, courtesy of a comprehensive condition monitoring and preventive maintenance programme from ABB.
After only a few months following commissioning in 2002, the Hamilton City Council Pukete waste water treatment plant aeration blowers suffered a number of motor bearing failures. With the motors being repaired at ABB’s Hamilton Service Centre, ABB assisted the Council to determine the root cause of the failures and appropriate corrective actions. Following that success, ABB was then engaged to provide planned maintenance on the blowers to ensure their ongoing reliability. The maintenance programme included:
• stringent lubrication program,
• oil analysis (quarterly),
• vibration analysis (monthly),
• oil replacement on condition,
• annual flushing,
• remove frame resonance.
Maintenance cost savings
In the nine years this program has run, there have been no motor bearing replacements and no major mechanical failures. At an early stage in this blower maintenance schedule, modifications were made to the blower unit frames to reduce resonant vibration. This improvement in reliability has allowed the Council to extend major service intervals by 50 percent and save $30,000 in annual maintenance costs.
On the back of this successful blower maintenance program, Hamilton City Council has pursued a wider vibration analysis programme throughout their water supply and waste water infrastructure. The objectives of this programme were to improve confidence in plant availability, focus maintenance spend, identify improvement opportunities, extend plant life and reduce the need for expensive system redundancy.
This plan currently includes routine vibration analysis of 128 machines. Additionally, the Council has pursued further reliability initiatives supported by ABB which include root cause failure analysis, precision machine alignment and balancing of rotating assemblies. The information collected has led to a 50 percent reduction in machine faults, and an improvement in plant condition. Consequently, a thorough understanding of fault conditions has improved availability by focusing corrective maintenance activities on priority equipment.
Sven Ericksen, Asset Maintenance Team Leader, from Hamilton City Council comments that the programme has resulted in an overall increase in plant availability and confidence in plant condition: “While the vibration monitoring has brought benefits by increasing the work carried out under planned shutdown conditions (51 percent), a key indirect benefit has been when early failure is identified within our environmental protection systems. This has allowed Hamilton City Council to keep regulatory authorities fully informed of upcoming maintenance work on these assets and providing them with impact mitigation plans for the work.

For more information: tracey.paver@nz.abb.com

Publishing Information
Page Number:
28
Related Articles
New Pump Handbook from Alfa Laval
Alfa Laval just published a brand new edition of the company’s renowned Pump Handbook. The 375-page handbook is free and contains scholarly information on basic pump functionality and in-depth...
Protecting Australia’s harbours from a silent threat
Omniflex has completed the addition of remote monitoring to the existing cathodic protection systems at five berths in Port Kembla, NSW, Australia. The existing impressed current CP systems vary in...
ADASH Lubri - Monitoring and Control of the Lubrication Process
Lubrication of bearings is an essential part of machine maintenance and is a critically important process for keeping the machine running and to extend bearing lifetime. However, how do you know that...