Reporter
REPORTER
by Marcia Gruver Doyle
Symposium covers critical equipment issues
C
Len Badal
Philip Johnson
oming engine technology will create
tougher lubrication challenges, said Len
Badal, Chevron Lubricants, speaking at
the Chevron Construction Symposium 2011,
held in November. One example: piston design
changes that reduce the crevice volume.
“Low-emission design places greater demands
on engine oil due to higher top ring temperatures,” Badal said.
Increasing biodiesel use, Badal noted,
also creates lubricant performance concerns,
including fuel dilution, corrosion, viscosity
increase, oxidation, piston and sludge deposits
and wear.
The symposium offered a variety of speakers on effective equipment management. A
sampling:
Measure productivity: Monitoring your
equipment via telematics offers several benefits,
said Mike Baker, vice president of sales, North
America, Navman Wireless. “It helps you the
make the rent-versus-buy decision,”
he said. And it can be used to
monitor productivity. One quarry
uses it to measure load cycle times
by using geo fences around the
load and dump zones. “Whatever system you use,” Baker said,
“make sure it gives you information that’s actionable. If you don’t
take immediate action, it won’t
help you.”
Contamination control: Be aware that
delivered oils and fuels typically have a level
of contamination, so you need to pre-clean
them before you use them. “This pre-cleaning
will take out some of the larger contaminates,
and will significantly reduce wear, although it
doesn’t stop it,” said Philip Johnson, Donaldson.
Grade yourself: “When your operators complain, do something, because they will only
complain so long and then figure you don’t
care,” says Gerald Green, strategic development manager, dealer capability development,
Caterpillar. So grade yourself on these 10
questions:
Do you know…
1. Your equipment cost per hour at the serial
number level?
2. Your cost at the major component level?
3. Your idle time per unit?
4. Your annual utilization per unit?
5. If you have a good inspection program?
6. If you have a system to track and manage
your equipment?
7. If your preventive maintenance products are
adequately performing?
8. If your operators are well trained?
9. If your vendors are partnering with you to
reduce costs?
For a copy of all presentations made during
the Chevron Construction Symposium, go to
constructionsymposium2011.com.
Smartphone use
More than half of respondents to a recent Equipment
World reader survey say they’re using an Internetenabled phone. Here’s how they’re using them.
Information received
Bid information 26%
General equipment information 22%
Industry news 19%
Equipment specs 15%
None of the above
58%
Activities
View email
Text
Visit websites
Use apps
85%
81%
71%
52%
Visit social media sites (Facebook, Twitter) 24%
Watch videos 20%
None of the above 4%
EquipmentWorld.com
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