Crane maintenance to cost less – Condra
CRANE and hoist manufacturer Condra has expanded its maintenance programme to include hands-on training for customersโ own service personnel.
The company is also to introduce remote diagnostics for on-screen assistance at isolated sites, rolling out these improvements at installations across Saudi Arabia, Mauritius, Bulgaria, Peru and Chile, and in all African countries where Condra has a presence.
Over time, the diagnostics will combine with remote specialist oversight to aid repairs by the customerโs own technicians.
Electricians at Condraโs factories already add diagnostic chips to frequency drives during crane manufacture. The plan is to extend this capability to other crane components, delivering on-screen assistance to any site with an internet signal.
Until now, Condraโs maintenance programme has incorporated only selected agents and technical teams from its own factories. In the future, where customers have their own maintenance crews, it will be these personnel who will execute this type of work, helped either by visiting teams, or remotely by specialists at Condraโs technical centre in Johannesburg.
On-demand emergency repairs will continue to be managed by Condra technicians sent to site.
Condra CEO Marc Kleiner explained that the goal is to lower the customerโs service costs, and to further improve his machine uptime and productivity.
โWe want to expand the capabilities of our customersโ maintenance personnel, who sometimes have difficulty repairing to OEM standard,โ said Kleiner.
โWe will work with them to identify the wrinkles, then let them get on with fixing those while our own people identify potential wear and take steps to correct it.โ
Kleiner said that Condra teams would execute repairs only after quoting. Once accepted, support staff at Condraโs head office would then assemble spare parts and arrange all export documentation for shipping. Spares lists would normally include parts needed for the long term, based on predictions of likely wear.
โThe idea is that a Condra team will oversee the mineโs own service personnel wherever possible, helping them carry out the repair themselves,โ Kleiner said. โThis will allow hands-on training under specialist direction.
โWhat weโre trying to overcome is the too-common practice of working a machine until it fails, then buying a new one, something often seen in mining applications.
โWhat weโre saying is this: If you buy the correct machine in the first place and look after it by carrying out scheduled maintenance, the life expectancy of your machine will increase along with your financial return. But if you wait until that machine breaks down, production will have to stop while you wait for the spares to arrive. This is not clever. With a little bit of support from our side, your machine will run more reliably and for much longer, and production can continue uninterrupted.โ