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Tasks

Inspection Tasks

Inspections are used in order to uncover hidden failures (also called "dormant failures"). They are also used as part of on condition tasks to detect impending failures so that preventive maintenance can be performed.

What’s Changed? In previous versions of RCM++, you could assign failure detection properties to an inspection task and set it to trigger a preventive task, thereby creating an on condition maintenance action. RCM++ 8 offers on condition tasks, eliminating the need to create your own. Therefore, failure detection properties are now available only for on condition tasks, not for regular inspection tasks.

In general, no maintenance action is performed on the component during an inspection unless the component is found failed, in which case a corrective maintenance action is initiated. However, there might be cases where a partial restoration of the inspected item would be performed during an inspection. For example, when checking the motor oil in a car between scheduled oil changes, one might occasionally add some oil in order to keep it at a constant level. This sort of restoration is not considered to be preventive maintenance; the deciding factor is that inspection tasks do not use spare parts. Note that an inspection task that triggers a corrective task will not restore the failed block. Only the corrective task will restore the block.

Inspection tasks (including the inspection and associated minor work):

In addition to the common task properties, the following options are used to configure inspection tasks in the Maintenance Task window:

To understand how inspections work during simulation, you should be aware of the following:

 

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