Practical Machinery Management for Process Plants: Volume 2, Third Edition: Machinery Failure Analysis and Troubleshooting



This newly expanded edition discusses proven approaches to defining causes of machinery failure as well as methods for analyzing and troubleshooting failures.

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Practical Machinery Management for Process Plants: Volume 2, Third Edition: Machinery Failure Analysis and Troubleshooting

Tags: Analysis, Edition, Failure, Machinery, machinery failure analysis, machinery management, Management, plants, Practical, Process, Third, Troubleshooting, volume, volume 2

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  1. #1 by AT Hsiah on February 5, 2010 - 12:07 pm

    Good for product plant analyzer to monitor its unit defect
    Rating: 2 / 5

  2. #2 by David G Bowser on February 5, 2010 - 2:46 pm

    This book is highly recommended for anyone involved with design, maintenance, and reliability of production machinery. Bloch and Geitner identify typical causes of machinery failure and include many well documented examples. Extensive coverage is given to problem solving and failure prevention methods. Charts, graphs and photographs of failed components add to the value of this book. Contents include: Ch. 1 – general troubleshooting, causes of failures, and root causes. Ch. 2 – general metallurgical failures related to stress, wear, and corrosion. Ch. 3 – machinery component failures – bearings, gears, couplings, seals, lubricant systems, magnetism in turbomachinery. Ch. 4 – organized approaches for machinery troubleshooting and with check lists. Many example check lists included. Ch. 5 – vibration analysis, find problems before failure occurs. Ch. 6 – generalized machinery problem-solving sequence: situation analysis, cause analysis, action generation, decision making, planning for change. Ch. 7 – statistical approaches. Ch. 8 – sneak analysis, an advanced trouble shooting method for hydraulic and electrical control circuitry. Ch. 9 – formalized failure analysis as a teaching tool. Ch. 10 – the “seven cause category approach” to root-cause failure analysis. Ch. 11 – cause analysis by pursuing the cause and effect relationship. Ch. 12 – knowledge based systems for machinery failure diagnosis. Ch. 13 – training and organizing for successful failure analysis and troubleshooting.
    Rating: 5 / 5

  3. #3 by David G Bowser on February 5, 2010 - 5:44 pm

    This book is highly recommended for anyone involved with design, maintenance, and reliability of production machinery. Bloch and Geitner identify typical causes of machinery failure and include many well documented examples. The book is filled with charts, graphs and photographs of failed components. Extensive coverage is given to problems solving and failure prevention methods. Contents include: Ch. 1 – general troubleshooting, causes of failures, and root causes. Ch. 2 – general metallurgical failures related to stress, wear, and corrosion. Ch. 3 – machinery component failures – bearings, gears, couplings, seals, lubricant systems, magnetism in turbomachinery. Ch. 4 – organized approaches for machinery troubleshooting and with check lists. Many example check lists included. Ch. 5 – vibration analysis, find problems before failure occurs. Ch. 6 – generalized machinery problem-solving sequence: situation analysis, cause analysis, action generation, decision making, planning for change. Ch. 7 – statistical approaches. Ch. 8 – sneak analysis, an advanced trouble shooting method for hydraulic and electrical control circuitry. Ch. 9 – formalized failure analysis as a teaching tool. Ch. 10 – the “seven cause category approach” to root-cause failure analysis. Ch. 11 – cause analysis by pursuing the cause and effect relationship. Ch. 12 – knowledge based systems for machinery failure diagnosis. Ch. 13 – training and organizing for successful failure analysis and troubleshooting.
    Rating: 5 / 5